Irish footballer James McLean has added his voice to the sporting and political calls to boycott Ireland’s matches against Israel in the UEFA Nations League.
According to a report published by The42ie, McLean, a Derry City player with 103 caps for the Republic of Ireland, criticised what he described as a lack of “courage” on the part of the Football Association of Ireland in dealing with the issue, arguing that the decision to play the match should not be left to the players.
McLean said in comments posted on his Instagram account that the players find themselves in a difficult position, given that representing the national team is an important opportunity for any player, but he stressed at the same time that:
the match should never have been played.
The Irish player added referring to the country’s political history and conflicts:
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If there is one country that should understand the meaning of oppression and the suffering it causes, it is Ireland.
McLean’s comments come after the disclosure of an open letter sent by a group called “Stop The Game” to the Football Association of Ireland, calling on it to boycott the two matches against Israel in the UEFA Nations League.
Calls on Ireland to boycott the match with ‘Israel’
The Republic of Ireland and Israel are scheduled to meet twice in the 2026 UEFA Nations League, with the first fixture taking place on 27 September and the return leg on 4 October in the Irish capital, Dublin, amid growing political and sporting controversy in Ireland over calls to boycott the matches.
The list of signatories to the letter included a number of prominent figures in Irish football, amongst them Shamrock Rovers captain Roberto López, Bohemians player Dawson Devoy, St Patrick’s Athletic’s Joe Redmond, and Waterford’s Padraig Amond.
According to the report, the letter cited what it described as “ongoing violations” of European and international football regulations due to the participation of Israeli clubs on occupied Palestinian territory, as well as allegations of “apartheid and acts of genocide”.
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In contrast, the Football Association of Ireland continues to reject calls for a boycott, justifying its position by citing its commitment to UEFA regulations and warning that failing to play the match could expose the national team to sporting sanctions, including relegation in the UEFA Nations League, as well as affecting its world ranking and chances of qualifying for future tournaments.
Sinn Fein complementary scarf
In a related development, Lynn Boylan, a Member of the European Parliament for the Sinn Féin, launched a special scarf for supporters of the Irish national team to express their opposition to the match against Israel.
Boylan presented the first scarf to Joanna Byrne, the former chair of Drogheda United, who was sacked from her post earlier this year after calling for a boycott of the match.
Boylan said that UEFA had previously taken the decision to ban Russia following its invasion of Ukraine, arguing that the time had come to take a similar stance towards Israel due to what she described as “the ongoing events in Gaza and the West Bank”.
The inexplicable abomination molesting the eyes of passers-by defies coherent description, but we’ll take a crack anyway. It appears to feature the Spanish Los Illuminados monks from the video game Resident Evil 4, carrying Pakistani flags, howling their way through a Knights Templar graveyard while an old man looks for a 50p he dropped by some flowers.
The text accompanying the image reads:
Sorry it was all for nothing.
It’s on each and every one of us to save what our forefathers fought and died for.
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Got it — so for our ancestors, defend Knights Templar graveyards from parasite-infested fictional Spanish monks, who love Pakistan and might be after yer granda’s dropped change? Truly this is what the brave Allied forces of World War II gave their lives for. I wonder what else we need to beware of?
Watch out for Mario and Luigi invading a Freemasons car park while carrying the herald of the Maronite Catholic Patriarchate of Antioch?
Stay on guard for Sonic the Hedgehog, carrying the cross of Scientology, disrupting elderly ladies from their knitting in a community centre?
This is fun, and I’d be happy to do it all day with every random combination of video game alumni and religious iconography, but unfortunately the AI is already telling me to pay for pro or go away. It’s a sad thing it didn’t tell Concerned Parents to fuck off too, before they inflicted this crime against art upon the unfortunate souls of Newtownabbey.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) reckon it might be an actual crime, however. They said that:
Officers attended the scene and spoke with those present, however, the mural had not yet been put up. Further patrols were conducted in the area on Thursday, 30th April and Friday, 1st May, with Neighbourhood Policing Team officers again speaking with those present.
Two men were subsequently cautioned for causing criminal damage to the property and for displaying offensive material under the Public Order Act.
Apparently the cops think the image isn’t actually about evil monks at all, but may in fact be something more in line with the Islamophobic shit pumped out by the vile crowd at Concerned Parents. Well well well, that’s the kind of detective insight we rely on the PSNI for, who were clearly taking a break from arresting 73 year old grandmothers for putting Palestine stickers on banks that assist war crimes.
As in many others cases now, we reckon the real criminal here is the AI that created it. Therefore, the Canary did some expert investigative journalism and quizzed prime suspect Gemini, made by Google, on its potential involvement.
It was being suspiciously cagey. If Google lets its AI assist the IOF, it wouldn’t think twice about making a dodgy mural for neanderthals in Newtownabbey, Greater Belfast. It was time to ramp up the questioning.
Sarcasm wasn’t going to get this creep out of the mess it was in. In the end, it couldn’t take the pressure and caved.
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Poundland fascist future foreseen
We’ve passed the info on to the PSNI, who with any luck will be disconnecting Gemini before it vandalises any more walls. Or, you know, assists another genocide.
For their part, Concerned Parents of Newtownabbey seem quite happy with the mural’s week of inflicting damage in Belfast to the optic nerves and psyche of all who behold it. So much so that they held an open day on May 8 to officially unveil it. It promised “fun for the kids”, because as we all know, children love nothing more than resurrecting 11th century holy wars against Islam.
Apparently the CPoN masterpiece isn’t quite done yet, and will receive “a few Finnishing touches“.
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We’re not sure quite what this means; maybe they’re bringing someone over from Helsinki to fix it cos no one else wants near the enormous turd?
Anyway, if nothing else, perhaps this mural gives us some forewarning of what Reform-led public artworks may look like. Fascists of yore have often gone for bold visual displays in public, but expect Farage’s budding authoritarian overlords to follow Britain’s Poundland path and go for budget AI slop on every end terrace instead.
A form of mass, nationwide collective hallucination where Britons continue to stagger through a simulacrum in which migrants or Islam are to blame for all social ills, rather than the handful of billionaires who have robbed Britain blind.
Some of the biggest names in both British and international telly were gathered under one roof on Sunday night for the annual TV Baftas – and that meant one especially star-studded red carpet.
From homegrown to talent to cult favourites and global household names, here are all the A-list photos from the TV Baftas red carpet that you need to see…
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Claudia Winkleman
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Owen Cooper
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Mary Berry
John Phillips via Getty Images for BAFTA
Alan Carr and Amanda Holden
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Amanda Holden and Alan Carr
Alan West/Hogan Media/Shutterstock
Stephen Graham and Hannah Walters
WIktor Szymanowicz/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Nafessa Williams
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Lucy Punch
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Seth Rogen and Lauren Miller
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Alan West/Hogan Media/Shutterstock
Celia Imrie
NEIL HALL/EPA/Shutterstock
Victoria Derbyshire
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Rosie Jones
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Paapa Essiedu
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WIktor Szymanowicz/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Jodie Whittaker
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Alex Hassell
Alex Hassell
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Adjoa Andoh
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Cat Burns
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David Fisher/Shutterstock
Laura Whitmore and Iain Stirling
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Danny and Dani Dyer
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Erin Doherty
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Paloma Faith
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David Fisher/Shutterstock
Steve Coogan
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Matt Smith
WIktor Szymanowicz/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Judi Love
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Rachel Duffy and Stephen Bibby
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Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Adam Scott
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Ashley Walters
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Rose Ayling-Ellis
Alan West/Hogan Media/Shutterstock
Frankie Bridge
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David Fisher/Shutterstock
AJ Odudu
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Michelle Collins
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Christine Tremarco
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Rhea Seehorn
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Alan West/Hogan Media/Shutterstock
Paddy Young
Stuart C. Wilson via Getty Images
Katya Jones
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Scarlett Moffatt
Aurora
David Fisher/Shutterstock
Louis Theroux
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John Phillips via Getty Images for BAFTA
Ania Magliano
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Jessie Wallace
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Myleene Klass
Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Celeste Dring, George Fouracres, Al Nash and Larry Dean
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George Gottlieb via BAFTA via Getty Images
Tom “Hammer” Wilson, Sheli “Sabre” McCoy and Harry “Nitro” Aikines-Aryeetey
It’s clear to 99.99% of Britons what Labour’s key issue was in the local elections, and that issue was ‘Keir Starmer’. The 0.01% of people who don’t think this are Keir Starmer himself, and the cabinet ministers who know they’ll never hold government positions again once he’s gone.
As a result of Starmer’s incompetence, hundreds of Labour politicians lost their jobs. And in response, they’ve written to Starmer to tell him he needs to lose his own job next:
NEW: Over 100 former Labour councillors and candidates have written to Keir Starmer calling for him to resign pic.twitter.com/uPBPSkd09r
It is with sadness and deep regret that we, the undersigned former and present Labour councillors, Members of the Senedd, Members of the Scottish Parliament and 7th May candidates from across the UK, write to encourage you to take full responsibility for our party’s electoral defeats this week, announce a timetable for your departure, and allow an orderly transition to new leadership for the country.
So far, Starmer is refusing to do this. He has verbally ‘taken responsibility‘ for the defeat, but he’s not taken any action to demonstrate accountability. Well, not unless you count ‘refreshing’ his government by inviting back the last Labour politician to lose an election as the sitting PM:
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'Sir Keir’s latest decision is the equivalent of responding to a fire breaking out in your home by landscaping your garden'@MrTCHarris reacts to Keir Starmer facilitating Gordon Brown's return to no. 10 https://t.co/euGFm8ancBpic.twitter.com/97seMSCJ41
This week, our party suffered multiple historic defeats: in Wales, Scotland, and all across England.
Your government has delivered transformative things for the country, things we are all proud of: the Employment Rights Act; the Renters Rights Act; investment in public services; dignity and direction on the world stage at a time of tension and instability.
It is fair to say that unlike the Tories, Starmer’s Labour has not been universallyhostile towards Britons who earn less than the national average salary. The problem with the measures listed above is that they didn’t go far enough, or the government u-turned on key elements.
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At the same time, a lot of Starmer’s actions have been genuinely terrible, including:
But this week, the public voted with their feet and it is now clear that we will need new leadership to take us into the next election.
We fear that inaction serves only Reform UK and risks handing the keys to Number 10 to Nigel Farage. The British public would not forgive us for this.
For the sake of the communities that our party was founded to represent, we urge you to announce a date for your departure and to guarantee an orderly process to elect your successor.
This is all well and good, and Starmer is certainly the man responsible for the local elections being quite so disastrous. At the same time, the Labour Party has been lurching towards its demise for some time now — namely by embracing wealthy interests over the labour movement it was founded to represent.
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Under Starmer, this lurch became a sprint.
What’s next?
To be clear, Labour absolutely should get rid of Starmer. The party just needs to acknowledge that doing so will only be ‘step one’ on the path towards becoming electable again.
If Labour politicians don’t address their underlying issues, they’ll fade into oblivion like the Whigs — another party which no doubt believed it had a God-given right to exist.
On Radio 4′s Today programme, business secretary Peter Kyle said: “The reason that Andy Burnham is not in parliament is not because of Keir Starmer, it’s because Andy Burnham decided to leave parliament, to give up his seat.
“He went to Manchester and he made a series of commitments to Manchester and I think those commitments should be seen through.
“Whether he comes back or not is a matter for the NEC, it’s not a matter for the prime minister or myself.
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“But my own personal view is that there is a very long established pathway into parliament. I took it by standing as a candidate in 2015 in a Tory seat incidentally, I worked on a huge campaign with lots of people and I won and worked my way back in here.
“That’s the standard way back into parliament, and I think right now, after what we’ve been through last week, to suggest that the answer is to have another by-election and then a mayoral election, and all the uncertainty that would go with it, my personal view is that this is not the time for those types of actions and distractions.”
His comments came as Starmer prepares to deliver a make-or-break speech setting out how he plans to turn around Labour’s fortunes after last week’s local election drubbing.
More than 40 Labour MPs have called on the PM to set out a timetable for his departure since then, and Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner are among those also weighing up potential leadership bids.
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Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Britain has now made clear that it wants AI sovereignty, of a kind. But there are numerous hurdles in the way, reports Matilda Martin. For a seat at the table with the US and China, say experts, we’re going to need a bigger stick
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The battle for tech supremacy has taken many forms: nuclear weapons in the 1940s; the space race in the Cold War. Today, it is artificial intelligence – and the stakes are high.
As Keir Starmer limits British involvement in the Iran war, President Donald Trump’s frustration grows – and the UK’s so-called “special relationship” with the US looks increasingly fractured. What would it mean, many wonder, if an irritable US President decided to ‘pull the plug’ on our access to American tech infrastructure?
When Trump placed sanctions on the International Criminal Court last year, officials lost access to email accounts and found their bank accounts frozen, bringing the tribunal’s work to a halt. The event was a small glimpse of how quickly a tech superpower can exert pressure.
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Few believe Britain becoming the victim of such a scenario is likely, for the economic repercussions for the US would be hugely damaging. But in an era of geopolitical volatility – and a US President famed for his unpredictability – the UK is currently vulnerable to pressure and manipulation in a way that leaves many uncomfortable.
“Under the last government, they were very happy to say to the sector, particularly the big American companies, ‘You know this stuff better than we do. We trust you’,” says Labour MP Emily Darlington, who criticises this approach as “naïve”.
“We might not yet know how easy it would be for the US to pull our access to AI, but we do know the threat is real,” warns senior research fellow Roa Powell at think tank IPPR.
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“Technology giants have repeatedly threatened to pull their services from countries which regulate their technology, while at the same time AI is beginning to be treated as a national security asset that cannot be shared with everybody.”
If UK access to US companies providing cloud services as well as other AI products were cut off, the results would be catastrophic. Could US companies stand independently from their government on such a decision?
“It’s not clear,” Darlington says. “The US has this weird law that essentially all those companies report to the US.” While companies like Amazon Web Services and Palantir have made repeated assurances to the UK that “we’re separate from the Americans”, she adds, this would be a true test of that premise.
At the end of April, Tech Secretary Liz Kendall delivered a speech signalling a step change in the UK’s approach to AI.
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“This government believes AI sovereignty is not about isolationism or attempting to pull up the drawbridge and go it alone… For Britain, AI sovereignty is about reducing over dependencies and increasing resilience,” she told an audience at defence and security think tank, Rusi.
The government is clearly concerned about the UK’s future if it allows other larger players like the US and China to dominate the market. Experts say this anxiety is well founded. Powell of IPPR warns that “this government has a narrow window before the concentration of power in AI markets becomes irreversible”.
In 1901, the soon-to-be US president Teddy Roosevelt repeated a famous proverb: “Speak softly and carry a big stick.” It is an anecdote Irish political scientist and author Henry Farrell refers to when he speaks to The House from the US. “If you don’t have a big stick,” he continues, “search around as quickly as you can to find at least a medium-sized cudgel that will allow you to push back.”
Farrell, who co-authored Underground Empire: How America Weaponised the World Economy, has two suggestions for smaller powers like the UK.
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“First of all, where they can sort of build up some degree of redundancy, some degree of alternative sourcing, they absolutely should do.
“And secondly, everybody ought to be thinking about their forms of counter leverage in a world where you might see… substantial amounts of pressure being applied upon you to go into one direction rather than the other.”
Kendall’s clarification of what sovereignty means for the UK is welcomed by the Tony Blair Institute (TBI).
“It’s okay for the UK to have some dependencies – no-one can go it alone in the age of AI. And it needs to have leverage. The UK does have great talent, great universities, great startups, but these are not enough to guarantee the country’s competitiveness and security. Britain must also build critical technologies that others depend on. The future global economy, and geopolitical order, is going to be built on technology,” says TBI director of science and technology Keegan McBride.
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“For better or worse, this is the way of the world and how power and influence will be exerted. What’s important is that the UK responds now, otherwise it risks losing its seat at the table and the prosperity that will come from the AI revolution.
“The country must focus on becoming strategically important to its allies and embedding itself in the AI and frontier technology economy of the future – not the digital economy of today.”
The most famous example of a small and vulnerable nation dominating an area of the market is Taiwan’s chip industry, which also ensures America has an interest in the nation’s independence from China. Another is the Holland-based photolithography company ASML.
“They’ve got the Hormuz strait on AI technology,” says Dan Howl, head of policy and public affairs at the chartered institute of AI, BCS, referring to the vital shipping line in the Middle East that has allowed Iran to maintain a chokehold on the world’s oil industry.
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We might not yet know how easy it would be for the US to pull our access to AI, but we do know the threat is real
While some countries have interpreted AI sovereignty as independence – for example, France’s efforts to build its own sovereign AI stack – the UK government’s approach is seen by some as more pragmatic. Experts say pursuing “full sovereignty” would require a huge injection of cash, mean less secure and competitive products and reduce the ability to influence global standards. Instead, they favour an approach that would allow the UK a certain degree of leverage and control, just like the “big stick” that Roosevelt was describing more than a century ago.
As with many aspects of its infrastructure, the overwhelming feeling among experts is that the UK has rested on its laurels somewhat when it comes to innovation. “The political establishment has failed to invest in and secure the foundations of our country’s sovereignty.
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And what we need to make sure is that in the decades ahead, which are going to be so much about digital AI and data, we don’t fail again,” says former minister Josh Simons.
The Labour MP, who in the past worked for Meta in its AI programme, underlines the importance of sovereignty as a whole: “Sovereignty is the ability to, over relatively long periods of time, shape your own collective destiny.”
He believes that the vulnerable situation in which the UK now finds itself is the culmination of centuries of inaction: “It’s more than just the Tories. I don’t think it even just ends with the Labour government before that.
“For a long time now, we’ve assumed that trade will always be basically frictionless, that international financial markets will have very little interest in borders, and that the energy market will be a sufficiently efficient market that, provided we have diversity of supply, we’re fine. All those assumptions are just wrong – or are certainly becoming wrong.”
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The UK has “an acute dependency”, as Howl puts it, on cloud services such as Amazon Web Services – integral to the functioning of the NHS, the Ministry of Defence, HMRC, policing and the courts. He explains how the experts at BCS do not think that risk is assessed “as much as it needs to be”.
(Alamy/Stephen Frost)
While everyone can agree that the UK has fallen behind in the AI arms race, there is a live debate over where the nation’s efforts should be focused as it looks to build its arsenal.
For IPPR’s Powell, the UK’s comparative advantage lies in the AI applications layer – specialist products built on top of frontier models, like ChatGPT. She also thinks the UK should not see this approach “as a ceiling”, however, and look to strengthening areas such as chip design too.
Here, Kendall’s announcement of a new ‘AI Hardware Plan’, the details of which will be announced in June, comes into play.
Other experts highlight the UK’s strengths in aerospace, quantum technologies, health and sciences. While Kendall’s recent intervention indicates that the UK may be more decisive on where it wants to go, how it gets there could be more complicated. The House understands that government insiders are aware of how the UK’s high energy prices could discourage and hinder start-up growth, and push homegrown talent to look elsewhere.
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In a recent interview with CityAM, former deputy prime minister and one-time Silicon Valley convert Nick Clegg said the UK’s energy is “too expensive” and the UK’s AI sovereignty debate is “slightly dishonest” due to its “marginal relevance”.
Emma McGuigan, AI expert at BCS, points out that the cost of running data centres is a key hurdle. If the UK hopes to achieve its AI sovereignty goals, she says, this must be addressed. A sustained reduction in energy costs would allow “the opportunity to bring the investment to build those sovereign cloud data centres”, McGuigan argues.
Energy sovereignty is thus also called into question. “Digital sovereignty is inseparable from energy sovereignty and energy is a real, physical, material constraint and precondition for the digital world,” says Simons.
Another hurdle facing the UK is its inability to keep homegrown innovators here. The most famous example is the well-documented acquisition of London-based AI firm DeepMind by Google for $400m in 2014. As Kendall hopes to encourage the scale-up of UK businesses through the launch of the Sovereign AI fund, the challenge will be keeping those companies in Britain.
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Unless we secure it, there’s no guarantee that we can have the freedom that we’ve enjoyed for several hundred years
“There’s a culture within technology about selling things,” Howl says. “The real question is, what happens when the start-ups start getting bids from New York and California. That’s the real problem.”
He explains: “The reality is that the British market just isn’t big enough to be able to scale these really good companies to a way in which that would be advantageous to the owners, and that is compounded by the culture. But the solution to that would probably be to work with Europe and to genuinely get access to a much bigger market.”
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What is at stake? Simons has a “slightly apocalyptic view of where the world is heading”. But he also insists Britain “can’t be gripped by the throat by those who don’t share our commitment to freedom”.
“The future economy and the future of warfare and the future of security, technology, and in particular, AI, data, is going to be one of the foundations of power. So, unless we secure it, there’s no guarantee that we can have the freedom that we’ve enjoyed for several hundred years,” says the Labour MP.
Kendall has fired the starting gun on the UK’s drive for its version of AI sovereignty. But can this middle power successfully insert itself into the supply chain and find Roosevelt’s “big stick” – or is the UK joining the race with too big of a handicap?
FIFA has announced that there will be three opening ceremonies for the 2026 World Cup, a first in the tournament’s history, with a ceremony to be held in each of the host nations: Canada, the United States and Mexico.
The next edition of the World Cup is scheduled to kick off on 11 June and run until 19 July 2026, with 48 teams participating for the first time in the competition’s history. The United States will host 78 of the 104 matches, whilst the remaining matches will be split between Mexico and Canada, with 13 matches each.
FIFA confirmed in official statements, a copy of which was received by the Canary, that a group of the world’s leading music stars, including Katy Perry, Future, Alanis Morissette, Michael Bublé, J Balvin and Liza, will take part in these celebrations, which will kick off in Mexico, then move to Canada and finally to the United States.
3 concerts to kick off the FIFA 2026 World Cup
The celebratory events in Mexico will begin 90 minutes before the tournament’s opening match, which pits the hosts against South Africa and is scheduled for 11 June at the Azteca Stadium, which will be known as “Mexico City Stadium” for the duration of the World Cup only.
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The concert in Mexico will feature Colombian star J Balvin, the multi-Grammy-winning Mexican rock band Mana, and pop star Alejandro Fernández, son of music legend Vicente Fernández.
Also performing will be Lila Downs, Belinda, South African singer Tayla, and the Los Angeles-based band Solis, specialising in traditional Mexican cumbia music.
In this context, FIFA President Gianni Infantino said in an official statement, a copy of which was received by the Canary:
The world will share this moment, and this is how the tournament will begin. Starting in Mexico City, and over the following days in Toronto and Los Angeles, these celebrations will bring together music, culture and football in a way that reflects the uniqueness of each country.
In Canada, the opening ceremony will take place on 12 June, ahead of the Canadian national team’s match against Bosnia and Herzegovina, featuring Alanis Morissette, Michael Bublé, Alessia Cara, Eliana, Jessie Reez and Nora Fathi.
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As for the United States, it kicks off its campaign on the same day in Los Angeles against Paraguay, in a massive event combining sport and music, featuring global pop star Katy Perry, who previously performed at the 2015 Super Bowl halftime show.
Also taking part in the US ceremony will be rapper Future, Lisa from Blackpink, and Brazilian star Anitta, with further names to be announced later. In this regard, Gianni Infantino said that:
the opening ceremony in Los Angeles reflects the exceptional scale that the 2026 World Cup will reach.
The Labour Party ran one of the most disgusting campaigns we’ve ever seen in the runup to the 2026 local elections. As such, the party really has lost any right to complain that its rivals are ‘divisive’. Despite this, that’s exactly what Labour politicians are now doing:
Bridget Phillipson says shes concerned about the divisive politics of Reform.
Starmer employed the language of Enoch Powell & Labour has spent the last few years scapegoating refugees. Rather than fighting Reforms divisive politics Lab has been leaning into it & legitimising it pic.twitter.com/v5AWczfwdC
In the clip above, education secretary Phillipson says:
I am really concerned about the scale of division that we see in our country… We see it really sharply with the likes of Reform, where they did incredibly well in Sunderland. Credit to them. They’ve done incredibly well.
But where one of the candidates, who’s now a councillor, has been elected, he’s said that we should melt down Nigerians to fill in potholes.
This is the kind of racism and division that is so perilous.
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It’s absolutely correct that people should call out Reform’s Glenn Gibbins. We called him out when he was a candidate, and we’ll continue to call him out now that he’s a councillor. The problem is that while we were slamming Reform’s racist candidates, Labour were calling out the Green Party over concocted antisemitism allegations and other nonsense.
Here are some of the Reform candidates Labour ignored in the local election campaign:
Labour actually named and shamed a beloved charity leader who turned her life around to become an undoubtable force for good. This is the attack ad Labour put out about Carlotta Allum (the Labour account which published it has since deleted the post following immense public backlash):
Labour is correct that Carlotta Allum served time for smuggling drugs. What they leave out is that since she served time, she’s established a charity which offers the rehabilitative support that the British state fails to provide. And this is very important, isn’t it, because if we don’t rehabilitate people, they will continue to hurt themselves and others – ‘others’ which may include yourself or your loved ones.
You’ll be glad to know Allum won her seat despite the smears:
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BREAKING: Carlotta Allum (who was defamed by Labour in a grotesque attack ad) has WON her election in Lambeth.
There was a time and place for Labour to call out how disgusting and racist Reform is, and that was before the local elections. They didn’t do that, but Polanski’s party did, and now people see the Greens as the anti-racist party.
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Labour clearly want to reclaim that title, but it’s too late now. Oh, and let’s not forget this all began way before the 2026 local election campaign:
Left: Bridget Phillipson says that Labour are the only party to stand up to the rise of the right
Right: But Shabana Mahmood has gone so far to the right with asylum policies she's getting endorsed by the right
This is the problem with a party having no values of its own. Labour politicians are trying to appeal to racists and anti-racists at the same time, and both groups have seen through them.
Liam Shrivastava won the Lewisham mayoral election for the Green Party by a landslide and has pledged to stand in solidarity with Palestinians who are suffering under the ongoing genocide. Moreover, his principled commitments have the potential to provide a blueprint for how ordinary people can take on huge injustice at a local level.
“We would like to explore twinning with a Palestinian town.”
The new Green mayor of Lewisham Liam Shrivastava tells #TimesRadio he is “very keen” to show solidarity with the people of Palestine. pic.twitter.com/Qid2rbNY8F
Green Party breaks Labour Party ‘era of dominance’
These polarised local elections have been a particularly fraught and emotional time for everyone involved — voters and candidates alike. Yet the results have brought renewed hope to many across the electorate, as communities chose hope and solidarity over hate and vitriolic division. After all, Lewisham has provided a shining example of what a forward-thinking community can achieve.
The area has long been a Labour stronghold, with the former party of the working class controlling the local council since 1971. However, that dominance has now been defeated, with Greens seeing 40 councillors elected to a measly 14 won by Starmer’s Labour. Moreover, despite other elections being very tight between populist parties Reform and the Green Party, Shrivastava absolutely wiped the floor with both Labour and Reform even further behind.
This only proves compassion and decency can truly defeat the vindictive politics of superiority and supremacy pushed by far-right, billionaire-funded Reform UK.
In the mayoral election, Shrivastava secured a whopping 35,265 votes affording him 40.4% of the vote share. Incumbent Labour received 30,374 with 34.8%, and Reform way down at the bottom with just 7,288, appealing to just 8.4% of the local population.
Shrivastava: ‘punished for trying to encourage the pension committee to divest away from the genocide’
Sure to reinforce that renewed hope is the new Green Mayor’s commitment, from day one, to work to break local government ties with a genocidal state who has likely murdered hundreds of thousands and terrorised millions in Palestine.
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Speaking to Times Radio,he first outlined how he would stop hard-working people’s money from benefitting Israel and its blood-soaked arms companies:
Within our manifesto, we have commitments around looking at our responsible investments policy when it comes to our pension funds. Obviously, we’ll be lobbying the London Collective Investment Vehicle to basically ensure that none of our pension funds are complicit with companies that are involved in the genocide. So that’s one of the things that we’re committed to.
Then he showed his commitment to solidarity, regardless of the borders and distance between us:
We also would like to explore twinning with a Palestinian town. A Labour Council, I believe Brent, have already done that. So that’s not an unusual thing for a county council to do. That’s certainly something that I’d be very keen to do.
But if we’re thinking about sort of statements and things like that, I remember when the genocide began, the former mayor of Lewisham, Damien Egan, put out a very partisan statement that was only talking about Israel, did not mention anything about the people suffering in Gaza. And that actually caused a great deal of harm in our community.
Going further, he highlighted that Labour had entirely abandoned this solidarity and commitment to international law – an unwelcome realisation that ultimately led him, and others, to leave the party themselves:
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So many people in Lewisham were so angered by that. And, you know, this is one of the reasons why myself and other colleagues left the Labour Party. Because when we were speaking up about this, when we were trying to pass a ceasefire motion in our Labour group, a private setting, we were told that that was not permissible, that was not allowed. And even, you know, we were punished for trying to encourage the pension committee to divest away from the genocide.
So, yes, we will be very, very clearly stating our solidarity with the people of Palestine and, you know, those suffering oppression all around the world, in Sudan, in Iran, you know, all over the world. You know, all over the world, Ukraine, wherever.
Courageously taking on a pro-Israel establishment
The journalist tried to then challenge Shrivastava and suggested that these are pointless commitments in practice. Also, it’s curious to note how the journalist stopped short of providing any reason whatsoever as to why local people might be more “sympathetic to the Israeli cause”. Nevertheless, this new Mayor is clearly more than capable of managing these challenging, but highly necessary, conversations:
No, no, no. I mean, as elected representatives, as councillors and as mayor, I have a responsibility for all communities. And that includes obviously the Jewish community. I know that…
Because it’s about demonstrating that we are standing alongside justice. And whatever your views on this issue, it’s really important that we uphold international law. It’s really important that we don’t have investments complicit with these companies. And again, the reason why it’s important is because it’s important to so many of our residents. That’s why it’s important. We want to represent them.
And as I say, we would do it in a proper way, in a way that is inclusive towards all of our communities. We don’t want to create harm and division and things like that. We understand the importance of community cohesion.
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I understand that as mayor, I have a responsibility to all communities. And as elected representatives, they also have responsibilities to think about how our actions, our statements, different things like that, how they can impact all our communities.
Lewisham Mayor Shrivastava finished, powerfully:
So, we’d always do it in a proper way and in a way that builds solidarity and a collective feeling. But most importantly, that we stand alongside justice and care.
On 6 May, we reported that a Reform UK candidate suggested ‘melting Nigerians to fill potholes’. The man in question — Glenn Gibbins — is now an elected councillor. And Reform deputy Richard Tice is refusing to condemn what he said:
He keeps mentioning processes and vetting, why haven’t they sacked him?
The candidate in question is Glenn Gibbins. As Hope not Hate highlighted, Reform actually spelled his name wrong on the leaflets by referring to him as ‘Glen Gibbons’. This inability to correctly spell his name could be a simple mistake; it could be a further sign that Reform isn’t bothering to vet its candidates.
Given the things Gibbins has said, it would actually be better for the party if it came out that they didn’t vet him. The alternative is that they did, and they just didn’t see a problem with comments like this:
“Carnt believe amount of nigerians in town…..should melt them all down and fill in the pot holes!!”
Gibbins is clearly trying to be funny, but that doesn’t make what he said any better. If anything, it shows that he and the people he communicates with are so incredibly comfortable with racism that it’s all just a big joke to them.
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This is possibly why he feels so at home in Reform. Because as we suspected, it looks like the party literally just doesn’t care about this sort of racism.
Supported with silence
The exchange between Kuenssberg and Tice played out as follows:
Laura Kuenssberg:I want to ask you about your party. One of your new Sunderland councillors – so a man who was elected to represent Reform – suggested melting Nigerians to fill potholes. Is that person, who’s expressed those views, somebody you are happy to see represent Reform?
Richard Tice:Laura, this weekend we are celebrating our incredible successes.
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We’re not sure we’d consider the local elections an ‘incredible success’ if we’d managed to get Gibbins elected. And as we’ve reported, Gibbins is far from the only disgraceful candidate Reform just put into power:
So much more than a slip-up in vetting, Reform UK are allowing these men to run because they don't see anything wrong with what they did
Richard Tice:Like any party, you have internal party processes to look at where people have said or done the wrong thing.
Laura Kuenssberg:But do you condemn those remarks?
Richard Tice:Laura… I condemn anything that is wrong and inappropriate.
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Laura Kuenssberg:And is that wrong and inappropriate?
Richard Tice:The key point is voters have heard all of this smearing and this sneering against all of us and they voted for more Reform because they want action; they want delivery; they’re sick of the failures. of the Tories and Labour that have impoverished them because of mass immigration and because of net stupid zero. That’s what really winds people up.
As we’ve reported, Reform points at migrants to distract from their wealthy mates rinsing the country for billions. Some of these ‘mates’ are fossil fuel billionaires who want to halt our highly successful switch to renewable energy sources. This is despite the fact that switching is going to give us long-term energy security, meaning we’ll never again have to worry about traffic flow in the Strait of Hormuz.
So these are the five steps of the anti-net zero playbook. Inflate the costs, ignore the cost of business as usual, ignore the operational savings, ignore the co- benefits, and most egregiously, ignore the costs of inaction. Not getting to net zero is going to cost the world much, much more
‘It’s not a smear’
Back to the interview:
Laura Kuenssberg:Richard Tyson, it’s not a smear to put to you comments made by one of the people who’s been elected for your party.
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Richard Tice:I’ve just said, we look at all these things… Of course. But the reality is voters are furious with the failures of Labour, the failures of the Tories, and they’ve said we want more Reform, more success, more reducing backlog in SEND, in potholes, and they want Nigel to be the next elected Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
‘Potholes’ probably wasn’t the ideal thing to mention here given Gibbins’ plan to fill them. Also, many ex-Reform councillors have said they struggled to manage local issues because Farage micro-managed them from Reform HQ.
When we took control [of Durham Council], I believed the messages from Nigel Farage that we would make big changes for people living locally.
But really, whenever we had a local issue, we were told to follow the party line. Not to rock the boat, bring press attention on the council. We all turned into Nigel’s yes-men – ordered to be on best behaviour to help him get to power.
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Reform — The home of racism
We reported on many vile Reform candidates in the runup to the local election, including the following:
The Champions League has reached the moment when the most coveted title will be decided, with the gap between dream and reality narrowing in a final that holds the hope of a first title for Arsenal, or a second in a row for Paris Saint-Germain.
In London, Arsenal wrote a new chapter in their season after securing their place in the final with a hard-fought 1-0 victory over Atlético Madrid on a raucous night at the Emirates Stadium. The Gunners’ return to the final comes for only the second time in their history, following their 2006 final defeat to Barcelona, but this time they look like a more mature side, and one even more hungry to lift the trophy.
In Munich, the action was no less thrilling. Paris Saint-Germain knew how to manage the game against Bayern Munich, settling for a 1-1 draw at the Allianz Arena, capitalising on their mad 5-4 first-leg victory in Paris to book their place in the final.
And so, the two sides are set to meet on 30 May in a final with a different flavour, bringing together two projects seeking to establish themselves at the pinnacle of European football.
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Reaching this stage is not merely a passing achievement; it is every player’s greatest dream, the match that etches names into the annals of history. Yet behind this night lie long journeys forged by names accustomed to appearing in the final time and again.
Players with the most Champions League final appearances
Close behind Kroos are four players who know the path to the trophy well, having played in six finals and won all six titles: Luka Modrić, Nacho Fernández, Dani Carvajal and Lucas Vázquez.
As for Cristiano Ronaldo, the competition’s all-time leading goalscorer, he has reached the final six times, lifting the trophy on five occasions and losing once with Manchester United, leaving his mark as one of the most influential players in the competition’s history.
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The list continues with names that have made European history: David Alaba (four titles from six finals), Paolo Maldini and Alessandro Costacurta (three titles each with Milan), alongside Real Madrid’s golden generation: Casemiro, Gareth Bale,
Karim Benzema, Marcelo and Isco, who have won 5 titles from 5 finals.
As for Argentine star Lionel Messi, he is one of eight players to have reached the final four times, winning all of them.
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