Politics
It’s not just the money, it’s the sense of entitlement. That’s the cause of sleaze in UK politics | Martin Bell
Lately I have been remembering the words attributed to the great Yogi Berra: “It’s like deja vu all over again.” My campaign to become the MP for Tatton seems a long time ago. Indeed, it was a generation ago. Yet in recent weeks it has felt like the day before yesterday.
The issue, now as then, goes under the generic heading of “sleaze”, generally defined as the use of public office for private profit. Then it was the allegation, made against Neil Hamilton MP among others, of receiving cash for asking questions in parliament. (Hamilton denied it, but the parliamentary commissioner for standards, Gordon Downey, found “compelling evidence” against him.)
Now it is a whole range of cases in which senior members of the new Labour government have accepted benefits in kind from generous donors – free clothing, free holidays and other contributions that, whether declared or not, have brought them into unnecessary disrepute; trivial enough in themselves, but already casting long shadows. All governments, even newly elected ones, face headwinds, but these are entirely of the politicians’ own making.
Why and why and why again? Why accept these freebies in the first place, and become such needless hostages to a generally hostile press? I do not buy into the “pity the poor public servants” line of defence. MPs in general, and ministers in particular, are sufficiently well paid that they should not even be tempted to run such risks with their reputations. With a salary of £91,346 plus expenses, even backbenchers should be able to buy good-quality clothes without holding out a begging bowl.
I have been casting my mind back to the Tatton campaign of 1997. Because I had been elected, with the support of the then opposition parties, on an issue of public trust in public life, I knew I had to be exceptionally careful in my own behaviour. I invited inquisitive journalists to inspect my bank accounts, which some of them did.
The only benefit I declared in the register of members’ interests was £200 from the Manchester Evening News for a monthly column. My only paid travel was far from a holiday, but a visit to Burundi for Unicef at a time of genocide. I turned down an invitation from Mohamed Al Fayed, the owner of Fulham football club, to be his guest one day at Craven Cottage. In the light of recent revelations about his behaviour and character, that seems to have been a prudent decision. I had particular reason to hold myself to a higher standard than the rules require – but I don’t understand why all MPs shouldn’t do the same.
I see no reason for drawing up a list of gifts that should never be accepted – a Savile Row suit, for instance, or a holiday in Barbados. Those will be judged decisively in the court of public opinion and common sense alone would rule them out. But a failure to declare such benefits should be heavily penalised.
Part of the answer to the enduring question of why MPs are so insouciant lies in the nature of the House of Commons itself: the grandeur of the setting, the liveried attendants, the archaic language (“honourable and right honourable members” and even the ex-military title of “honourable and gallant members”) and a consequent sense of entitlement. It surprised me when I started feeling it after a year or so as an MP, and it had to be abruptly fended off.
It helped to bring me to my senses that I served for most of my four years on the standards and privileges committee – the body through which the House of Commons sits in judgment on those of its members who are accused of breaking the rules. A series of extraordinary cases came before us, some of them involving senior MPs on the government side, which tested the system up to the limit and beyond. These led to a whispering campaign against the then commissioner for standards, Elizabeth Filkin, which resulted in her being let go from her post in 2002 for doing her job too well.
From these experiences I have concluded that in the present emergency – and yes, it is an emergency – the House of Commons does not need a new disciplinary system. It needs to take the existing system, which arose from the cash-for-questions and other scandals of the early 1990s, and make it work as it should.
That means a top-down determination by the government not to repeat its errors. It means that the Commons privileges committee’s members, still in the process of being chosen, must be willing to park their party allegiances at the door, which has not invariably been the case in the past. It means ignoring the special pleading of influential MPs. It means placing a heavy burden on the shoulders of its new chair, once they have been elected, to avoid favouring their own party over any other.
MPs should remember above all that it is not their parliament. It is our parliament. We would like to be proud of it and well served by it. Its members would do well to reflect on the matter of their legacy, and how they would like to be remembered, as the best or the worst of British. Speaking personally, I am sick and tired of these scandals – so much so, that I put my thoughts into a couplet of condemnation:
I might have served for another term, but the game’s not worth the candle,
When the Commons calendar consists of 52 weeks of scandal.
-
Martin Bell is a former independent MP for Tatton
-
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Politics
Labour MP Mike Amesbury filmed punching man to the ground in Cheshire | Labour
Footage has emerged of a Labour MP punching a man to the ground and then hitting him several more times.
A video published by the Mail shows Mike Amesbury, the MP for Runcorn and Helsby, hitting the man in the face and knocking him to the floor, before standing over him and aiming six more blows at his head.
The security camera footage also shows Amesbury shouting: “You won’t threaten me again, will you?”
Amesbury said in a statement on Saturday night: “Last night I was involved in an incident that took place after I felt threatened on the street following an evening with friends. This morning I contacted Cheshire police myself to report what happened during this incident.
“I will not be making further comment but will, of course, cooperate with any inquiries if required by Cheshire police.”
After an initial video showing the aftermath of the altercation was published on Saturday night, a Labour spokesperson said: “We are aware of an incident that took place last night. We understand that Mike Amesbury MP approached Cheshire police to report what happened this morning himself and that he will cooperate with any inquiries they have.”
The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, refused to say on Sunday whether Amesbury would have the whip suspended while police investigated.
“Mike Amesbury is cooperating fully with the police,” she said. “He’s gone forward himself to the police, and it is right that the police now look into this matter, investigate and decide what action, if any, is required.”
Officials did not respond on Sunday after footage emerged of the incident.
Cheshire constabulary said in a statement: “At 2.48am on Saturday 26 October, police were called to reports of an assault in Frodsham. A caller reported he had been assaulted by a man in Main Street. Enquiries are ongoing.”
The footage shows Amesbury talking to the man at 2.15am in the Cheshire town of Frodsham. Shortly after the man looks away, Amesbury punches him with enough force to knock him to the ground, before standing over him and hitting him repeatedly as a third man tries to prise him away.
Amesbury was a shadow minister in the housing department before the election but was not given a government job after the party came to power. He won his seat with a majority of nearly 15,000 ahead of the second-placed party, Reform UK.
Politics
Labour backbenchers accuse Keir Starmer of ‘colonial mindset’ | Labour
Three prominent Labour backbenchers have accused Keir Starmer of an “insulting” and “colonial mindset” over his reluctance to discuss reparations for the transatlantic slave trade.
Ahead of a summit of the Commonwealth heads of government in Samoa last week, the prime minister rejected calls to discuss reparations with Caribbean and African nations, with No 10 insisting it was “not on the agenda”.
Starmer said slavery was “abhorrent” but his stance was “looking forward rather than looking backwards”, adding that he wanted to focus on discussing “current future-facing challenges” at the summit instead of “very long, endless discussions about reparations on the past”.
On Sunday the Labour MP Bell Ribeiro-Addy addressed a cross-party reparations conference in London, saying it was “very insulting [to] tell people of African descent to forget and move forward”.
“Reparations are not about relitigating historic injustices, they are about remedying the deep-rooted inequalities that still shape our world today,” she said. “At a time when there is growing awareness of how racial hierarchies that endure to this day were constituted to justify the enslavement and colonisation of African peoples, state-led action on reparations is sadly lacking.”
Another Labour MP, Clive Lewis, said it was surprising Starmer had thought he could take a “colonial mindset” to the summit and “dictate what could and could not be discussed”.
Diane Abbott, the first Black woman to become an MP, co-chaired the conference in London. She said the Labour party previously had plans to establish a national reparations commission but Starmer “seems to have forgotten that”.
“Reparations isn’t about the past, it is about the here and now,” she said. “The descendants of African slaves and colonised peoples continue to suffer from the consequences generations later.
“Real reparations aren’t just about compensation, they’re a way of tackling colonialism’s damaging legacy of racism and inequality. They are about the total system change and repair needed to heal, empower and restore dignity.”
At the conclusion of the Commonwealth heads of government meeting (Chogm), the leaders resolved that “the time has come” for a conversation on reparatory justice.
A document signed by the 56 leaders, including Starmer, stated it was time for a “meaningful, truthful and respectful conversation” about justice for the transatlantic trade in enslaved Africans and chattel enslavement, with the aim of forging “a common future based on equity”.
Ribeiro-Addy, who chairs the all-party parliamentary group for Afrikan Representation, said: “I’m very proud those nations refused to be silenced.”
In a press conference after the summit, Starmer downplayed the significance of the paragraph in the document that called for a conversation about reparatory justice, telling reporters it was a small part of “quite a long communique”.
“None of the discussions have been about money. Our position is very, very clear in relation to that,” he said. He added that the issue would be revisited when a delegation of Caribbean nations visits the UK next year.
Last week, amid mounting pressure, a source in No 10 told the Guardian that the UK could support some forms of reparatory justice, such as restructuring financial institutions and providing debt relief.
“There is a general sense that these multilateral institutions give out loans to developing countries then charge large interest rates for repayments,” the source said.
Politics
CCTV appears to show Labour MP punching man to the ground
CCTV footage has emerged appearing to show Labour MP Mike Amesbury punching a man to the ground.
In footage obtained by the Daily Mail, the Runcorn and Helsby MP is apparently seen continuing to hit the man as he lies in the street.
It comes after a different video, posted on X, purported to show Amesbury shouting and swearing at the man lying in the street in Frodsham, Cheshire.
In that clip, Amesbury can be heard shouting: “You won’t threaten the MP ever again, will you?”
Both Amesbury and the Labour Party have been contacted for their response.
It is not clear what happened in the build-up to the moments caught on film.
In a statement issued before the Daily Mail footage emerged, Cheshire Police said: “At 02:48 BST on Saturday 26 October police were called to reports of an assault in Frodsham.
“A caller reported he had been assaulted by a man in Main Street. Enquiries are ongoing.”
Posting on his own Facebook page on Saturday, the 55-year-old backbencher said: “Last night I was involved in an incident that took place after I felt threatened following an evening out with friends.
“This morning I contacted Cheshire Police myself to report what happened.
“I will not be making any further public comment but will of course cooperate with any inquiries if required by Cheshire Police.”
Amesbury has been a Labour MP in Cheshire since 2017 and served as a shadow minister between 2018 and 2024.
In the July general election he won his constituency with a majority of 14,696.
Politics
Cutting off Unrwa would deeply harm Israel’s reputation, says UK minister | Foreign policy
Israel’s reputation as a democracy would be “deeply harmed” if the Knesset pressed ahead with bills this week that would end all Israeli government cooperation with the Palestinian relief agency Unrwa, the UK’s Middle East minister has said.
Hamish Falconer said such a move at a time when the humanitarian crisis in Gaza was catastrophic and worsening would “neither be in Israel’s interest or realistic”.
His remarks are the strongest criticism yet by a western government minister of the legislation, which could be voted on as early as this week unless the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, intervenes.
He was speaking as a joint statement was released from seven European foreign ministries, including the UK’s, urging Israel to drop the proposed bill, saying: “It is crucial that Unrwa and other UN organisations be fully able to deliver humanitarian aid and their assistance to those who need it most, fulfilling their mandates effectively.”
Falconer demanded that more aid be allowed to enter Gaza and said too many civilians were being killed in Israeli attacks on Hamas in Gaza. He was speaking at a conference in London convened by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
Falconer said the measures taken by the Labour government so far did not indicate any decline in Labour support for the state of Israel, but his remarks were as sharp as any delivered by a Labour minister.
He said: “We are deeply concerned by legislation currently under consideration by the Israeli Knesset which would critically undermine Unrwa. It is neither in Israel’s interest nor realistic.
“Given the agency’s vital role in delivering aid and essential services at a time when more aid should be getting into Gaza, it is deeply harmful to Israel’s international reputation as a democratic country that its lawmakers are taking steps that would make the delivering of food, water, medicines and healthcare more difficult.”
He added: “The international community are clear that Unrwa and other humanitarian organisations must be fully able to deliver aid.”
Many Israelis regard Unrwa as too closely linked with Hamas and also committed to the Palestinian refugees’ right of return.
Falconer, who has recently been to the Egypt-Gaza border, said humanitarian access to Gaza remained wholly inadequate. “I saw for myself thousands of trucks waiting to cross the border,” he said. “Some had been there for months. There were warehouses full of life-saving items – medical equipment, sleeping bags and tarpaulin for the winter. There have been repeated attacks on humanitarian convoys and the level of aid getting in is far too low.”
He challenged Israel’s military tactics inside Gaza, saying: “Hamas is a brutal terrorist organisation, it hides behind Gazan civilians, but all parties must do everything possible to protect civilians and fully respect international humanitarian law.”
He said Israel “must protect civilians even if it means making difficult choices. All too often in the pursuit of Hamas we have seen civilians pay the price. The Israeli government must take all necessary precautions to avoid civilian casualties, to ensure aid can flow into Gaza and freely through all humanitarian land routes.”
Falconer also said: “As long as there is little accountability for settler violence, the government will consider further actions.”
Warning that the risk of further escalation could not be exaggerated, he called for calmer heads to prevail and urged Iran not to retaliate for Saturday’s Israeli attack. The death of the Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar presented an opportunity for a new chapter, he said, and no military solution existed to the crisis.
Speaking at the same event via video link, the former UK prime minister Tony Blair said: “Hamas cannot be allowed to continue to govern Gaza, and Israel will need to pull back to allow the development of a different governance structure for Gaza that would then enable reconstruction to take place.”
Blair said he knew that many in Israel doubted Gaza could ever be run differently, and many assumed a “higher level of support for Hamas than exists in reality”.
He said polls commissioned in August by the Tony Blair Institute showed that the most popular choice was an administration of Gaza representatives with international oversight and linked to the Palestinian Authority. He said the poll showed that in the West Bank there was strong agreement behind moderate to deep reform of the Palestinian Authority.
Politics
Education secretary ‘open minded’ on England smacking ban
The education secretary has said she is “open minded” to a ban on smacking children in England, but that there are no imminent plans to change the law.
It comes after fresh calls for a ban in England by Children’s Commissioner Dame Rachel de Souza, who suggested adopting similar measures already in place in Scotland and Wales.
Asked if she supports that proposal, Bridget Phillipson told the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg that the government is “considering it” but legislation would not be brought forward “any time soon”.
Children’s charity the NSPCC called on new legislation “as soon as possible” as there was “mounting evidence” that physically disciplining children could be “damaging”.
Speaking on Sunday morning, Phillipson said she was keen to hear from Dame Rachel and other experts “on how [a ban] would work”.
She added that she thought “we do need to look at how we keep children safe”.
Phillipson added that the upcoming Children’s Wellbeing Bill, which is expected to be introduced “by the end of the year”, will address many of the issues relating to children’s care and safeguarding.
Anna Edmundson, head of policy at the NSPCC, told the BBC that calls had tripled to the charity’s helpline from adults concerned about the use of physical punishment on children.
In a statement she added: “That is why we want the Government to legislate as soon as possible to give children in England the same protection from assault afforded to adults and already in place for children in Scotland and Wales.”
Other charities, including Barnardo’s, have also long called for an English smacking ban and two-thirds of English people polled by YouGov in March last year said physically disciplining a child is not acceptable.
In England and Northern Ireland it is legal for a carer or parent to discipline their child physically if it is a “reasonable” punishment – but the Children Act 2004 made it illegal to assault a child causing actual or grievous bodily harm.
The previous Conservative government argued parents should be trusted to discipline their children and there were “clear laws in place” to prevent violence.
The Department for Education told the BBC earlier this week that it was now “looking closely” at the law changes made in Scotland and Wales, which came into force in 2020 and 2022 respectively, to see whether more could be done in England.
Posting on X last week, Dame Rachel said a ban on any kind of corporal punishment, including smacking, hitting, slapping and shaking, could stop lower level violence from escalating.
“If we are serious about keeping every child safe, it’s time England takes this necessary step,” she said.
“Too many children have been harmed or killed at the hands of the people who should love and care for them most.”
Politics
David Amess’s daughter says Prevent anti-terror scheme ‘isn’t fit for purpose’ | UK security and counter-terrorism
The daughter of the murdered MP David Amess has criticised Home Office failures that meant her father’s killer was unmonitored for years before the attack, saying the Prevent programme “isn’t fit for purpose”.
Speaking to the Sunday Times, Katie Amess condemned the fact her father’s killer was known to authorities but his case was closed due to “an admin error”.
“We know the guy did it,” said Katie. “I just want to know how and why he was allowed to … What has been changed to ensure that this never happens again and that another family doesn’t have to go through the absolute heartbreak and trauma that has just shattered our world?
“My father gave 40 years of his life, day in, day out, to his people and his country. He is owed the decency and the respect to find out where he was failed.”
Ali Harbi Ali was convicted of stabbing Amess to death on 15 October 2021 at a church in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, where the Conservative MP had been holding an advice surgery for people in his Southend West constituency.
It was later revealed that Ali had been referred to the government’s anti-radicalisation Prevent programme, and then for more intensive support through the Channel counter-terrorism programme before his case was closed. He went on to spend at least two years researching which MP to murder.
He told police he had carried out the killing because he was angered by western actions in Syria and saw himself as a soldier of Islamic State.
Katie Amess said the family were told Ali’s case was not followed up in the programme “due to an admin error” that meant a second meeting with the then 18-year-old did not take place.
The newspaper reported that Lincoln Brookes, the senior coroner for Essex, said there had been “some shortcomings” in the Prevent programme and Ali’s case was closed even though problems had not been addressed.
Brookes said “record-keeping is problematic and the rationale for certain decisions was not explicit” and “an opportunity to assess whether or not any progress had been made was missed”.
However, the coroner concluded the programme would not necessarily have prevented the attack and that it “would be speculative to assume that national security services do, should or could, detect and track every Islamic State sympathiser”.
Amess’s family pushed for an inquest to consider the state’s failings in the run-up to Ali’s attack, but in July Brookes ruled there was not enough evidence to justify holding one.
Katie Amess, an actor who lives in California, said she had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, while her mother, Julia, 70, who was married to Amess for nearly 40 years, moved out of the family home of three decades in Southend because it was too painful to stay.
“It’s just the most unbearable, unspeakable pain. We’ve lost a great, great man who can’t be replaced. Now I just want to make him proud by fighting back against being told no to something that we should be allowed to know. I can’t accept this,” she said.
“He was reported. People were trying to help us. And so why was he allowed to just go on and do whatever he wanted for seven years? What happened to my dad should not have been an admin error.”
The family wants greater protection for all MPs and is pushing for more answers about what happened to Amess, and how his killer evaded authorities for so long.
“It’s pretty obvious that Prevent isn’t fit for purpose, it has consistently failed people,” Katie Amess said. “It failed me. It failed my family catastrophically, it failed the public and also it failed other members of parliament.”
A Home Office spokesperson said: “Our thoughts continue to be with Sir David Amess’ family and friends. The attack on Sir David Amess was an awful tragedy, the safety of members of parliament is paramount and significant work has been taken forward in response to his tragic killing.
“Prevent is a vital tool to stop people from becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism and tackles all ideological causes of terrorism.”
-
Technology1 month ago
Is sharing your smartphone PIN part of a healthy relationship?
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
How to unsnarl a tangle of threads, according to physics
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Hyperelastic gel is one of the stretchiest materials known to science
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
‘Running of the bulls’ festival crowds move like charged particles
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Maxwell’s demon charges quantum batteries inside of a quantum computer
-
Technology1 month ago
Would-be reality TV contestants ‘not looking real’
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
X-rays reveal half-billion-year-old insect ancestor
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Sunlight-trapping device can generate temperatures over 1000°C
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Ukraine is using AI to manage the removal of Russian landmines
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Liquid crystals could improve quantum communication devices
-
TV4 weeks ago
সারাদেশে দিনব্যাপী বৃষ্টির পূর্বাভাস; সমুদ্রবন্দরে ৩ নম্বর সংকেত | Weather Today | Jamuna TV
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Quantum ‘supersolid’ matter stirred using magnets
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Samsung Passkeys will work with Samsung’s smart home devices
-
Sport4 weeks ago
Boxing: World champion Nick Ball set for Liverpool homecoming against Ronny Rios
-
Football4 weeks ago
Rangers & Celtic ready for first SWPL derby showdown
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Physicists have worked out how to melt any material
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Laser helps turn an electron into a coil of mass and charge
-
News3 weeks ago
Massive blasts in Beirut after renewed Israeli air strikes
-
News3 weeks ago
Navigating the News Void: Opportunities for Revitalization
-
MMA3 weeks ago
‘Uncrowned queen’ Kayla Harrison tastes blood, wants UFC title run
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
A new kind of experiment at the Large Hadron Collider could unravel quantum reality
-
News3 weeks ago
‘Blacks for Trump’ and Pennsylvania progressives play for undecided voters
-
News3 weeks ago
▶ Hamas Spent $1B on Tunnels Instead of Investing in a Future for Gaza’s People
-
MMA4 weeks ago
Dana White’s Contender Series 74 recap, analysis, winner grades
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Gmail gets redesigned summary cards with more data & features
-
Football4 weeks ago
Why does Prince William support Aston Villa?
-
Technology1 month ago
Russia is building ground-based kamikaze robots out of old hoverboards
-
Womens Workouts1 month ago
3 Day Full Body Women’s Dumbbell Only Workout
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Microphone made of atom-thick graphene could be used in smartphones
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Pereira vs. Rountree prediction: Champ chases legend status
-
Business3 weeks ago
When to tip and when not to tip
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Aaron Ramsdale: Southampton goalkeeper left Arsenal for more game time
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Wales fall to second loss of WXV against Italy
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Musk faces SEC questions over X takeover
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Man City ask for Premier League season to be DELAYED as Pep Guardiola escalates fixture pile-up row
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Why this is a golden age for life to thrive across the universe
-
Business4 weeks ago
DoJ accuses Donald Trump of ‘private criminal effort’ to overturn 2020 election
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Microsoft just dropped Drasi, and it could change how we handle big data
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Ketlen Vieira vs. Kayla Harrison pick, start time, odds: UFC 307
-
Money3 weeks ago
Wetherspoons issues update on closures – see the full list of five still at risk and 26 gone for good
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
A slight curve helps rocks make the biggest splash
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Nuclear fusion experiment overcomes two key operating hurdles
-
News1 month ago
▶️ Hamas in the West Bank: Rising Support and Deadly Attacks You Might Not Know About
-
Technology1 month ago
Meta has a major opportunity to win the AI hardware race
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Quantum forces used to automatically assemble tiny device
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
ITER: Is the world’s biggest fusion experiment dead after new delay to 2035?
-
Technology1 month ago
Why Machines Learn: A clever primer makes sense of what makes AI possible
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney renews blast at ‘gatekeeper’ platform owners
-
News4 weeks ago
Woman who died of cancer ‘was misdiagnosed on phone call with GP’
-
Sport4 weeks ago
Sturm Graz: How Austrians ended Red Bull’s title dominance
-
MMA3 weeks ago
‘I was fighting on automatic pilot’ at UFC 306
-
Technology4 weeks ago
This AI video generator can melt, crush, blow up, or turn anything into cake
-
Business4 weeks ago
Sterling slides after Bailey says BoE could be ‘a bit more aggressive’ on rates
-
News3 weeks ago
Cornell is about to deport a student over Palestine activism
-
Sport4 weeks ago
China Open: Carlos Alcaraz recovers to beat Jannik Sinner in dramatic final
-
News3 weeks ago
Family plans to honor hurricane victim using logs from fallen tree that killed him
-
Sport3 weeks ago
2024 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup: Pakistan beat Sri Lanka
-
Entertainment3 weeks ago
New documentary explores actor Christopher Reeve’s life and legacy
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Nerve fibres in the brain could generate quantum entanglement
-
MMA4 weeks ago
Julianna Peña trashes Raquel Pennington’s behavior as champ
-
News3 weeks ago
Hull KR 10-8 Warrington Wolves – Robins reach first Super League Grand Final
-
Business3 weeks ago
The search for Japan’s ‘lost’ art
-
Technology3 weeks ago
The best budget robot vacuums for 2024
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Coco Gauff stages superb comeback to reach China Open final
-
News4 weeks ago
Rwanda restricts funeral sizes following outbreak
-
Business4 weeks ago
Bank of England warns of ‘future stress’ from hedge fund bets against US Treasuries
-
Business4 weeks ago
Chancellor Rachel Reeves says she needs to raise £20bn. How might she do it?
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Texas is suing TikTok for allegedly violating its new child privacy law
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Time travel sci-fi novel is a rip-roaringly good thought experiment
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
How to wrap your mind around the real multiverse
-
News1 month ago
▶️ Media Bias: How They Spin Attack on Hezbollah and Ignore the Reality
-
Business4 weeks ago
Stocks Tumble in Japan After Party’s Election of New Prime Minister
-
News3 weeks ago
German Car Company Declares Bankruptcy – 200 Employees Lose Their Jobs
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Check, Remote, and Gusto discuss the future of work at Disrupt 2024
-
Technology3 weeks ago
If you’ve ever considered smart glasses, this Amazon deal is for you
-
Technology4 weeks ago
J.B. Hunt and UP.Labs launch venture lab to build logistics startups
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Kayla Harrison gets involved in nasty war of words with Julianna Pena and Ketlen Vieira
-
MMA3 weeks ago
UFC 307 preview show: Will Alex Pereira’s wild ride continue, or does Khalil Rountree shock the world?
-
Business3 weeks ago
Head of UK Competition Appeal Tribunal to step down after rebuke for serious misconduct
-
Business3 weeks ago
Stark difference in UK and Ireland’s budgets
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Pereira vs. Rountree preview show live stream
-
Technology3 weeks ago
The best shows on Max (formerly HBO Max) right now
-
MMA3 weeks ago
‘Dirt decision’: Conor McGregor, pros react to Jose Aldo’s razor-thin loss at UFC 307
-
Sport4 weeks ago
World’s sexiest referee Claudia Romani shows off incredible figure in animal print bikini on South Beach
-
Science & Environment4 weeks ago
Markets watch for dangers of further escalation
-
Football4 weeks ago
Simo Valakari: New St Johnstone boss says Scotland special in his heart
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Apple iPhone 16 Plus vs Samsung Galaxy S24+
-
Politics4 weeks ago
Rosie Duffield’s savage departure raises difficult questions for Keir Starmer. He’d be foolish to ignore them | Gaby Hinsliff
-
Technology3 weeks ago
OpenAI secured more billions, but there’s still capital left for other startups
-
Health & fitness4 weeks ago
NHS surgeon who couldn’t find his scalpel cut patient’s chest open with the penknife he used to slice up his lunch
-
Money3 weeks ago
Pub selling Britain’s ‘CHEAPEST’ pints for just £2.60 – but you’ll have to follow super-strict rules to get in
-
News1 month ago
Our millionaire neighbour blocks us from using public footpath & screams at us in street.. it’s like living in a WARZONE – WordupNews
-
Business4 weeks ago
how UniCredit built its Commerzbank stake
-
MMA4 weeks ago
Alex Pereira faces ‘trap game’ vs. Khalil Rountree
-
News4 weeks ago
Liverpool secure win over Bologna on a night that shows this format might work
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Amazon’s Ring just doubled the price of its alarm monitoring service for grandfathered customers
-
TV3 weeks ago
Love Island star sparks feud rumours as one Islander is missing from glam girls’ night
-
Technology4 weeks ago
SingleStore’s BryteFlow acquisition targets data integration
-
Sport4 weeks ago
Premiership Women’s Rugby: Exeter Chiefs boss unhappy with WXV clash
-
Technology3 weeks ago
LG C4 OLED smart TVs hit record-low prices ahead of Prime Day
You must be logged in to post a comment Login