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Politics

The Ultimate Festival Essentials Checklist For 2026

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The Ultimate Festival Essentials Checklist For 2026

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.

Fandom is a commitment. And if you’re so set on trekking across the country – and sometimes to another country altogether – to see your favourite musician perform, you’ll at least want to do it in style.

With festival season having already kicked off, you’ll likely be planning what you’re going to wear on your next adventure.

But even more important than that, especially if you’re camping, is what’s going to keep you safe, dry, and well fed. Because, though we might be in a dry spell currently, I wouldn’t trust the UK weather to stay that way. Sorry, not to sound like your mum!

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So whether you’re off to a day festival or camping over a weekend, here’s my round up of festival essentials for summer 2026 – including sensible but cute shoes, camping gear, beauty products, and clever ways to charge your phone.

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War criminal Tony Blair launches surprise attack on Burnham

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Tony Blair and Andy Burnham

Tony Blair and Andy Burnham

Historically, people in Britain said there is ‘nothing certain but death and taxes.‘ At this point, the third inevitability we can add is ‘disgraced war criminal Tony Blair will stick his oar in, and the media will describe it as an ‘unprecedented intervention.”

In the latest instance of this, Blair has returned to take aim at Labour hopeful Andy Burnham:

The ghost of Tony Blair continues to haunt Labour. Coming up for 20 years since he left Downing Street he has been tainted not just by his illegal wars but his lucrative work for despots. Imagine if Clement Attlee who left office in 1951 had continued to offer unsolicited advice into the 70s.

Gerry Hassan (@gerryhassan.bsky.social) 2026-05-26T21:28:06.189Z

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Experience

The Independent’s editorial opens with two of the worst written sentences in journalistic history — both structurally and substantively:

One of the reasons why Sir Tony Blair was Labour’s longest-serving and, certainly in domestic matters, most successful prime minister is that, both while preparing for power and then while in it, he possessed an obvious youthful wisdom. Now, almost two decades after he left Downing Street, and in his most dramatic intervention yet, he brings that same wise counsel, tempered by experience, to bear on his party’s current travails.

This stream-of-consciousness gibberish reads like it was written at gunpoint, with Blair holding the gun.

Look, we’re not going to argue Blair isn’t experienced. The problem is the things he’s experienced in are:

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45 minutes from Manchesterism

We should note that while some are describing the Blair essay as a direct attack on Burnham, there is disagreement about who or what he’s talking about:

Blair’s writing is also bad, but less tortured than the Independent’s. The section which the media is interpreting as an attack on Andy Burnham is this:

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the alternative which thinks the answer is moving even further left on taxes, spending and welfare, spun with a rehash of the far-left critique about nothing good coming out of the last ‘40 years’ of ‘neo-liberalism’, which presumably includes the last Labour government.

We don’t know why he has to ‘presume’ this. He could literally confirm it by checking a calendar or simply by remembering. He’s also the poster child of neoliberalism, which the Canary’s Ed Sykes explains is:

very much the modern machine for class warfare, and it has been for decades (particularly since Margaret Thatcher’s time in power, in Britain). It’s all about austerity (cutting public spending), privatising public resources, freeing companies from regulations, and turning citizens into competitors rather than communities. Even many mainstream economists have condemned it as a failed economic model that deepens inequality, undermines democracy, slashes living standards (especially for the poorest people and younger generations) while only serving the interests of the richest.

Blair’s essay includes criticism of Labour’s workers’ rights laws and plans to uplift the minimum wage. The neoliberal mindset is that anything which is good for workers is bad for business, and that businesses doing well is all that matters.

Given that most Britons are workers rather than business owners, it’s hard to see how the country is doing ‘better’ when it’s only a minority of ultra-wealthy capitalists who experience any meaningful improvement.

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The following chart shows how Blair and his centrist colleagues won big in 1997 and then lost more and more voters over time. Jeremy Corbyn reversed this trend in 2017 before losing all that by backing a second Brexit referendum. Even then, Corbyn still outperformed Brown and Miliband in terms of the number of voters as opposed to the percentage. His performance was also stronger than what Starmer achieved in 2024.

“Perennial delusion”

Continuing with his perceived attack on Burnham, Blair said:

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It is one thing when in opposition to indulge this perennial delusion that when we lose seats to the right the country is really signalling it wants Labour to move left; it is dangerous to do it in government.

The problem with what Blair is saying is that it’s a completely dishonest account of what’s happening. Who could have guessed, coming from the guy who dragged us into an illegal war based on lies?

As HG reported for the Canary:

YouGov’s new study of the 2026 local elections shows that only 46% of Labour voters from 2024 who went to the polls remained loyal to the party. More previous voters backed the Green Party (22%) than voted for Reform (6%).

In comparison, the Conservatives retained 55% of their vote, with 33% switching to Reform.

Here’s that visualised:

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Blair will voice the lie that Labour is losing more voters to the right and the establishment media will repeat it, because these people are liars.

Saying all this, there was one point Blair made which we don’t fully disagree with.

Cometh the hour, whereth the plan?

The point in which Blair is half right is this:

Trying to force the prime minister out before we know what policy direction we’re bringing in, is not a serious way of conducting ourselves.

And this:

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It is because we don’t have a worked-out, coherent plan for the country in a fast-changing world and are in the wrong political position from which we can devise one and win a second term.

Burnham has been plotting to replace Starmer for some time now, as we’ve reported. Given this, we assumed he must have some sort of strategy for governing. As we’ve seen in the past few weeks, however, he’s flip-flopping all over the place:

Blair might be worried that Burnham isn’t right-wing enough, but there is no substantive left-wing policy platform coming from Burnham right now. Really, there isn’t any substantive platform whatsoever.

It seems instead that he’s just another politician who thinks they’ll do a better job simply by making better day-to-day decisions.

The radical centre

In his essay, Blair also said:

There are two epochal changes happening in the world today – one geopolitical, the other technological – and Britain is not prepared for either.

They require radical change in policy, system of government and politics.

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The best political space from which this can be achieved is what I call the Radical Centre.

The centre – properly defined – is where you put policy first and politics last. So, you begin with the question: what is the right answer? And only once you have that do you engage in the political task of persuading people of it.

For examples of this mindset in practice, see Blair’s support for:

In case you didn’t notice, these are all things which the public hates.

In a way, Blair’s dedication towards his own beliefs is admirable, and it’s a quality many politicians lack. The problem is Blair’s beliefs are rancid.

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All this aside, we do think Blair should return to the ‘Radical Centre’. We’re all made from stars, after all, and where better to send him than the centre of the sun?

Featured image via the Canary

By Willem Moore

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Mothin Ali tells Labour to stop begging the Greens to stand down

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Andy Burnham and Greens Mothin Ali

Andy Burnham and Greens Mothin Ali

There are many people attached to the Labour Party who have argued the Greens should do the ‘decent thing’ and stand down in the Makerfield by-election. The counter-argument to this is why would they? And as the Greens’ deputy leader Mothin Ali has now said:

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Put up or shut up

The Makerfield race may be the most decisive by-election in British electoral history. If Andy Burnham wins, he will almost certainly replace Keir Starmer as the PM. In other words, we’re essentially having a US-style presidential race that’s being decided by a single borough in Wigan.

Current polling from Survation suggests Labour is leading:

This was before the Green Party had an official candidate, with said candidate being Sarah Wakefield:

Wakefield is the Green Party councillor for Deansgate, having recently been elected to the position. Our own Skwawkbox wrote of her:

Wakefield represents something of a ‘safe’ candidate for the Greens in Makerfield. Unlike Kennedy, she appears to have been relatively silent on Israel and its genocide in Gaza. This deprives the UK Israel lobby of an opportunity to attack her, but will also frustrate the many who will want to support a clear anti-genocide candidate in the by-election.

Given the demographics of Makerfield, it’s likely not the case that having strong opinions about the genocide would benefit her — although we always encourage such opinions, of course. The Greens’ position on other hot topics could cut through enough to trim down Burnham’s vote, if they put some effort in.

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Leader Zack Polanski said the following about Wakefield:

Burnham has no such plan to tax the rich. In fact, the more we’ve looked into it, the more it seems like Burnham has no plan full stop:

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Despite this, there’s some reporting to suggest that the Greens are scaling back their campaign:

As the Guardian reported:

The Greens have decided to devote only limited resources to next month’s Makerfield by-election, the Guardian has learned, in a potentially significant boost to Andy Burnham’s chances of winning the seat.

The party is instead expected to focus more on the by-election for the Greater Manchester mayoralty, which will be triggered if Burnham is returned to parliament, senior Green figures have said.

This would explain why the party is running a candidate who can simply return to her council position once the race is over. And to be fair, it might arguably be smarter to go for broke on the Greater Manchester mayoral race, should Burnham vacate the position. The question is whether this sort of tricksy behaviour will wash with members.

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Which is it, Greens?

So are the Greens laying down to let Burnham in? Or are they taking the fight to Labour, as Ali suggests here:

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If the Greens are standing down to let Burnham in, what happens when he’s PM?

Do they half-arse every race moving forwards to not disturb his premiership?

We know senior Greens like Caroline Lucas wanted the party to stand down because Burnham supports proportional representation. This is something he’s now admitted he wouldn’t introduce this parliament, though, and there’s no way of guaranteeing he would put it in Labour’s next manifesto — especially not if his government seems likely to benefit from not doing so.

While the senior politicians are thinking like politicians, however, the members are thinking like fighters:

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The Greens’ membership hasn’t trebled because Zack Polanski made a habit of backing down. And the party would do well to remember that.

Featured image via the Canary

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By Willem Moore

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British police arrest and charge 7 over ‘Globalise the intifada’ signs

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British police arrest and charge 7 over ‘Globalise the intifada’ signs

British police have charged seven people for holding signs saying ‘globalise the intifada‘. This comes after Keir Starmer asked police forces to prosecute people using the phrase back in December 2025.

Keir Starmer called the phrase an example of “extreme racism”. However, the reality is that the British state is just reacting to Israel being under pressure – this time, by oppressing the Arabic language, specifically, the word ‘intifada’.

Intifada

The term intifada ( ةضافتنا) comes from the Arabic root n-f-ḍ, which means “to shake off,” “to rise up”, or “to rid oneself of something burdensome”. In modern Arabic, the term has been used to describe uprisings, revolts or popular movements against injustice and domination. Importantly, the word itself does not inherently denote violence; rather, it signifies a collective act of resistance or refusal.

The phrase became popular globally because of its association with the history of Palestine, particularly the First Intifada from 1987 to 1993. This uprising emerged because of Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza after 1967.

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The First Intifada consisted of mass civil resistance: strikes, boycotts, demonstrations, refusal to pay taxes, and community self-organisation. At the time, it was widely understood by human rights organisations as a popular grassroots revolt against an illegal military occupation.

The Second Intifada, from 2000 to 2005, was triggered by increasing IOF violence and its extensive use of live ammunition against Palestinian demonstrators. Human rights organisations documented the IOF’s widespread use of lethal force against unarmed protesters.

Armed resistance was the Palestinians’ response to, rather than an initiation of, violence. Importantly, armed resistance is perfectly legal under international law.

As a result, in some Western media outlets and political discourses, the term ‘intifada’ became narrowly associated with violence and terrorism. However, this removes it from both its broader semantic meaning and the legal and political context of military occupation. Crucially, this was not the dominant way that Arabic speakers have viewed or used the term.

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Arabic speakers also widely use the word ‘intifada’ to refer to other uprisings, protests, and anti-authoritarian movements. The phrase is not exclusive to Palestine or intrinsically tied to armed struggle.

Free speech

Now, the British Prime Minister is essentially attempting to further criminalise free speech and political protest by banning the phrase. Why? because the British government is complicit in Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

Police forces started treating the phrase as self-evidently antisemitic. Of course, this is not because a group of world-class linguists have debated the case and come to a conclusion, as you might expect. It’s simply because the political mood demands it.

As Jamal Awar previously wrote for the Canary:

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antisemitism has once again been shamefully weaponised to justify the repression of Arabs in general and Palestinians in particular.

After the Bondi Beach attack, the Metropolitan Police and the Greater Manchester Police announced that chanting the phrase could lead to arrest. They did not create or cite a new law, and did not clarify a legal threshold. Instead, the cops relied on that age-old police tactic – vibes and fear.

Expert opinion

Recently, Dr Abdul Bashid Shaikh, a lecturer in Islamic Studies, and Mustapha Sheikh, a professor of Islamic Thought and Muslim Societies, both from the University of Leeds, published a paper on the term ‘intifada’. Before publication, over two dozen well-known scholars read and endorsed it.

Their expert opinion maintains that:

there is no evidential basis for treating references to intifada in these contexts as encouragement of terrorism or violence. Academic analysis demonstrates that attempts to conflate the term with jihadist violence represent a category error that collapses distinct political, historical and ideological phenomena.

They also state that claiming the phrase is antisemitic is purely political, rather than racial or religious. This is reinforced by the fact that many Jewish individuals and organisations participate in these demonstrations, and they explicitly reject that the term is antisemitic. The paper added:

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interpretation of the term as inherently antisemitic likewise cannot be sustained without abstracting it from its linguistic meaning, historical plurality and social context.

They conclude:

On this basis, and consistent with established principles of UK public order jurisprudence, the use of the term intifada in the circumstances examined falls within the domain of lawful political expression that democratic societies have traditionally sought to protect. To construe it otherwise would require a decontextualised and speculative reading of political speech, with significant chilling implications for freedom of expression and the legitimate articulation of dissent.

Western narrowing through a ‘counter-terror’ lens

In the context of Palestine, the intifada was not just a one-off uprising, but an “institutionalized condition of collective resistance”. It was a shared political formation.

However, Western media has narrowed and redefined the phrase through the lens of counter-terrorism and public order. This means they have removed its linguistic roots and used it as a proxy for violence or terrorism.

It has turned a political descriptor into a presumed threat, meaning police now treat it as inherently suspect and dangerous regardless of context, intent or accompanying conduct. Of course, this plays right into the hands of Israel and zionists around the world, who will do anything to criminalise Palestinian resistance.

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Feature image via Annice Lyn/Getty Images

By HG

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Forbes ranks Ronaldo, Messi, and Benzema among sports top earners in 2026

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Forbes names top earning athletes of 2026

Forbes names top earning athletes of 2026

The world’s top-earning sportsmen are making billions, according to Forbes’ annual list of the world’s highest-paid athletes. Their earnings reflect ballooning sponsorship deals, investments, and commercial rights.

Mega contracts, lucrative brand deals, and sponsors

Portuguese star Cristiano Ronaldo topped the list with a total income of $300 million, driven by a mega contract with Saudi Arabian club Al Nassr and lucrative endorsement deals.

Lionel Messi came in fifth globally with $140 million, maintaining his position among sport’s highest-paid athletes. He also retains a strong commercial profile off the pitch.

The report confirmed that the total income of the top ten athletes exceeded $1.4 billion in one year — the highest total in the history of Forbes’ ranking — reflecting a major transformation that transcends the boundaries of sport itself.

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Football’s oil money boom

Forbes reported that the 2026 list also included LeBron James, who came in fourth in basketball with $137.8 million, while Japan’s Shohei Ohtani came in fifth in baseball with $127.6 million. Stephen Curry ranked sixth in baseball with about $125 million.

Frenchman Karim Benzema came eighth in football with $110 million, and American Kevin Durant came ninth in basketball with $103.8 million. The top ten is completed with a wide sporting diversity.

The report also indicated the continued influence of the Saudi Pro League in reshaping the global salary market, by attracting first-class stars and raising the wage ceiling in football.

Top athletes earn record $1.4bn

According to Forbes, the top ten athletes collectively made more than $1.4 billion in one year — the highest total in the history of the rankings.

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The average age of athletes on the list was 37, the highest in Forbes’ history. This reflects the continued dominance of veteran stars at the top of the financial table, despite the rise of a new generation of talent.

The report pointed out that athletes’ sources of income no longer depend only on salaries, but also on personal branding, advertising contracts, investments, and social media platforms, which have become key drivers of modern sports wealth.

Featured image via Richard Pelham

By Alaa Shamali

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The Nighttime Habit A Psychologist Calls A 'Subtle' Burnout Sign

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The Nighttime Habit A Psychologist Calls A 'Subtle' Burnout Sign

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Burnout is described by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as an “occupational phenomenon”, which can lead you to feel exhausted, cynical, and less effective at work. 

It’s believed to affect as many as 65% of workers in the UK, the Mental Health Foundation shared. 

But according to psychologist Dr Bijal Chheda of Nos Curare, some signs of the common condition are easily dismissed as “normal”. 

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Here, she told HuffPost about one such symptom, which appears at night. 

Nighttime overthinking might be a sign of burnout 

“Struggling to switch off at night can be a subtle sign of burnout,” Dr Chheda told us.

You might notice your mind starts replaying the day or jumping ahead to everything you need to do tomorrow, which are signs of insomnia.” 

Indeed, researchers think that insomnia involves its own, specific kind of rumination, which often involves worrying about how you’ll feel the next day.

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A 2017 paper found that among finance workers, job strain was only a burnout risk factor if it came along with insomnia. Another study suggested that burnout and insomnia “predict each other’s development and intensification over time”.

Dr Chheda said that the two might form a vicious cycle.

“When stress builds, it becomes harder for your brain to fully switch offOver time, this can lead to a poor sleep cycle that leaves you feeling mentally drained and stuck in patterns that are hard to break,” she shared. 

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What should I do if I experience this?

Start your wind-down routine half an hour before bedtime, and be proactive in setting up a calming environment,” Dr Chheda said. 

“Switch off harsh overhead lights to lower stimulation and stick to warmer lighting so your brain starts to wind down. Instead of doomscrolling, keep to gentle stretches, listening to music or reading, to send a clear signal to your brain that it’s time to switch off.”  

If your sleep issues continue, she added, speak to a medical professional.

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Reform is pretending its Makerfield candidate was Action Man

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ROBERT Kenyon of Reform UK

ROBERT Kenyon of Reform UK

Reform UK’s candidate in the Makerfield by-election is one Robert Kenyon. So far, Kenyon has attracted a great deal of criticism for the things he’s said in the past and the things he’s saying right now. Kenyon isn’t the only one talking nonsense, however, with his party joining in too:

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Reform gets territorial

As Reform Exposed notes above, Kenyon was a member of the Army Reserves — what we once called the Territorial Army. This is how the actual Army describe the reserve force on their website:

The Army Reserve is the largest of the UK’s Reserve Forces. It is a vital component of the Army, providing essential mass, unique capabilities, and a diversity of skills critical to meeting the Army’s commitments.

Army Reservists volunteer to serve alongside regular soldiers with an annual training obligation of either 19 or 27 days.

So the Army Reserves is like the Scouts but for adults. So the Man’s Brigade, essentially.

At the same time, it’s not all fun and games. We did deploy reservists in Iraq and Afghanistan. As the BBC reported, this gave them the opportunity to:

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fight — and die — alongside comrades from the regular Army

Not much of an opportunity if you ask us; especially when we’re talking about one clearly illegal war and another which we ultimately lost.

All things considered, then, an Army Reserve could find themselves in a position in which they’re honourably ‘serving’ their country. For that to happen, of course, the UK would have to involve itself in a war in which we weren’t:

  1. The aggressors.
  2. Acting at the behest of US oil conglomerates.

As most of us know, the wars of the 21st century have not ‘served’ Britain whatsoever. And even if you think our recent military history was anything other than a series of murderous mistakes, there’s no evidence Kenyon served anyway:

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In his own words

In the Reform video at the top, Kenyon says:

I joined the Army Reserves in 2020 and I absolutely loved my time in the Army Reserves.

This seemingly confirms that he didn’t get deployed anywhere — that, or he just loves getting shot at. Kenyon continued:

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I was in the Royal Engineers, I was a combat close support engineer. My grandad was in the Navy, he got sunk twice during the war

My grandad was also in the Royal Navy during World War II. I’m not sure how many times he was sunk, and even if I did, I probably wouldn’t lead with that information out of respect.

Kenyon also said:

Imagine going away for four years for your country, that would have been horrendous conditions and imagine going in the Navy in the Second World War.

Much like Kenyon, we can also only imagine, because we’ve never actually been to war.

A final thing to note is that Brits have to fantasise about WWII because it was the last time we were clearly anything like ‘the good guys.’

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If you really want to ‘serve’ your country, do it by ensuring young lads don’t have to die for the benefit of ExxonMobil.

Clean hands

To be entirely fair, the fact that Kenyon didn’t serve in Iraq shouldn’t be a criticism. The issue is that Reform is pretending he’s something he isn’t because the party thinks it will appeal to voters.

Should you be the sort of voter in question, by the way, remember that Kenyon is also the guy who said this:

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Featured image via Reform UK

By Willem Moore

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Federated Hermes targeted over oil pipeline support

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Protesters outside office of Federated Hermes

Protesters outside office of Federated Hermes

As the climate crisis made itself all too evident across the UK with searingly high temperatures, climate activists occupied the lobby of the UK headquarters of Federated Hermes.

They called on the company to stop funding the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP). This is a massive ‘carbon bomb’ expected to generate 379 million tonnes of CO2 in its lifetime.

The activists from Cut The Ties to Fossil Fuels entered the lobby of Federated Hermes handing out leaflets to staff and displaying banners saying “EACOP is a Carbon Bomb”.

Outside they painted windows with the slogan “DROP EACOP” and stuck oily money over them, as well as setting off smoke flares and holding banners demanding that Federated Hermes Drop EACOP.

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The action is part of a global week of action “Kick Polluters Out’ called for by impacted communities in Uganda and Tanzania.

Federated Hermes – financing the climate crisis

Federated Hermes is a leading investor in TotalEnergies, the principal partner in the controversial project to extract oil from underneath Lake Albert in Uganda and build the nine hundred mile pipeline to the Port of Tanga, Tanzania for export.

As part of Climate Action 100+, Federated Hermes claims to be engaging with TotalEnergies in order to convince it to adopt a transition strategy aligned with the Paris Agreement.

Yet TotalEnergies regularly raises its oil and gas production targets, reduces its investments in sustainable energies and has refused to let their shareholders vote on their climate plan.

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TotalEnergies is still by far the biggest shareholder in EACOP. In spite of this TotalEnergies is Federated Hermes’ number one fossil fuel investment.

The International Energy Agency has said that there can be no new oil and gas production if we are to reach Net Zero by 2050 and stay within survivable climate boundaries.

Present at the action, Caroline Hartnell, a grandmother from London, said:

Federated Hermes are hypocrites, EACOP is a ‘Carbon Bomb’ expected to generate 379 million tonnes of CO2 in its lifetime.

EACOP is displacing 100,000 people across Uganda and Tanzania, threatening both the Lake Victoria basin, a water source which is relied on by more than 40 million people, as well as putting at risk critical wildlife reserves supporting elephants, chimpanzees and lions.

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Shocking levels of violence and intimidation have been inflicted on the people in the path of the pipeline, including rapes and arson attacks. We demand Federated Hermes immediately divests from TotalEnergies, the leaders of this disastrous project and Cuts the Ties to Fossil Fuels.

The EACOP project has been condemned by the European Parliament, citing the wrongful imprisonment of human rights defenders and the arbitrary suspension of NGOs opposed to
the project, by the UN and groups such as Human Rights Watch who accuse it of devastating people’s livelihoods and exacerbating the global climate crisis.

Global Witness has also criticised the project, exposing a climate of intimidation and harassment aimed at silencing criticism of the pipeline. To date 30 major insurance firms and over 40 banks have publicly ruled out financing or insuring the controversial project.

Also at the action, Clare Finn, a retired solicitor from Brighton, said:

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The world’s problems are clear to see; conflicts, displacement, exploitation, genocide, ecological breakdown and existential changes to our climate. These crises are intersectional and they share a common root; the systems of power that value private profit over people and planet.

At the heart of this toxic system sits the fossil fuel industry and we are here to call out Federated Hermes and all who fund and support this life sapping industry. We act in solidarity with everyone in the path of EACOP whose lives are being ruined by reckless corporate greed. Cut the Ties to fossil fuels!

Trust Chikodzo, Kick Polluters Out coordinator, Magamba Network, said:

Right now people in Nairobi are burning barricades over fuel prices while TotalEnergies counts record profits from war and chaos.

The Global South is not collateral damage, we are being bled dry so money flows abroad. We have the sun, the wind, the minerals, what we need is to finance people-powered systems and kick these polluters out.

Featured image via Cut The Ties to Fossil Fuels

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By The Canary

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Why Does My House Suddenly Have So Many Flies?

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Why Does My House Suddenly Have So Many Flies?

A week ago, my house was pretty much fly-free. But something’s changed since: now the sun’s out, it feels like every insect in the country has made its many-legged way into my home.

Well-fed bluebottles buzz lazily through my living room. Mosquitoes (we’re not even near a body of water!) flit menacingly. I think I’ve even seen some fruit flies, which are usually most prolific around August.

I’m not alone. Colleagues and friends have noticed the unexpected visitors, too.

What’s going on? Do we just notice flies more when it’s hot out? Or does their behaviour actually change?

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We put those questions to entomologist Professor Richard Wall from the University of Bristol, and also asked how to get rid of them.

Why does my house have so many flies all of a sudden?

Professor Wall said that there’s a pretty simple explanation in this particular case: “if people see more flies in their houses when it’s hot, it’s probably because they have the windows open more”.

We’ve experienced something of a temperature whiplash recently, as the weather swung from relatively cool to record-breakingly hot this month. That means that while you might have been trying to keep the heat in as recently as last week, you’ve probably inadvertently given flies a new way in since.

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Outside of this specific situation, the expert added that heat really can change how the creatures act.

“Flies do… breed faster when it’s hotter,” he told HuffPost UK.

However, that’s not what we’re experiencing now, as “it takes weeks or months to get a noticeable increase in numbers”.

What should I do to get rid of flies in my house?

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Stopping them from getting in in the first place is the most important step, Professor Wall said.

“The only real way to make your house more fly-free is to install mesh screens over the windows and doors,” he told us.

And the expert said to steer clear of chemical controls, too: “The use of insecticides should be discouraged”.

The Wildlife Trusts said that the UK’s insect populations have “drastically declined” in recent years. We’ve lost about 50% of our bugs since the 1970s, they added, calling for the UK government to “phase out the use of pesticides in publicly-run spaces”.

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Union pushes to make workplace sexual harassment reportable as a safety risk

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Union pushes to make workplace sexual harassment reportable as a safety risk

The Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union (BFAWU) have been pushing forward with the ‘End Not Defend’ campaign to make sexual harassment in the workplace a reportable harm under health and safety regulations.

Responding to a recent consultation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) – which focused on necessary changes to the Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013 (RIDDOR) – the union has called out the HSE’s failure to address this “critical and longstanding gap in the UK’s workplace safety framework”.

Highlighting that sexual harassment has been excluded in the HSE consultation, the BFAWU state:

This omission is not technical – it is structural.

If workplace harm is not recognised within RIDDOR, it is not systematically recorded, not prioritised, and not effectively prevented.

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The Workers Policy Project launched the End Not Defend campaign to directly confront this widespread issue.

Justifying the crucial need for this campaign, they state on their website:

2 in 5 (43%) women and 18% of men report having experienced sexual harassment at work. It also disproportionately affects workers in low paid, and insecure worker like young people, women, minoritised ethnicities, and those reporting a disability.

Most workers don’t report sexual harassment due to fear of retaliation, damage to career prospects and weak reporting systems, or simply because they don’t understand their experiences.

What is RIDDOR?

RIDDOR is a piece of law in the UK that places a legal duty on employers to report certain harms in the workplace, which can impact an employee’s health and safety. The current list of harms reportable under this legislation are workplace deaths, injuries, diseases, and also any ‘near misses’ to protect the wellbeing of staff members.

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It also ensures that employers report any serious workplace harms to the regulator and record them nationally. Regulators can then use this data to identify where they need to implement inspections, enforcement action, or preventative measures to make sure bosses prioritise the health and safety of staff.

As BFAWU underscore in their proposal, seen by the Canary:

What is reported can be regulated. What is regulated can be prevented.

However, as the policy document outlines, sexual harassment is one of the most common issues in the workplace and causes great harm to those who experience it. Despite this, it is excluded from the RIDDOR framework and is not reportable at all.

Moreover, the law does not even recognise sexual harassment as a criminal offence, leaving victims with nowhere to turn and allowing perpetrators to intimidate them into silence. A feeling that far too many women will be able to relate to in a society where sexual abuse is only increasing in prevalence.

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In practice, this means that HSE has no regulatory oversight of sexual harassment in the workplace with the oversight responsible to the employer. As a result of employers seeking to protect their public image and reputation, reports of sexual harassment – if they have felt confident enough to raise it with their boss – are subject to the views of the employer.

Therefore, this often makes victims worry about their job security and enables employers or colleagues to intimidate those affected into silence for fear of “rocking the boat”.

Sexual harassment is a safety risk

As many victims will recognise and undoubtedly relate to, sexual harassment causes significant harm to those who experience it. This includes the psychological and physical harm it inevitably causes, which can further increase self-awareness of insecurity and unsafety in the workplace.

Furthermore, because such behaviour is often repeated and systemic, women are disproportionately affected by this offensive conduct.

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Ian Hodson, President of the BFAWU, told us:

For too long employers have closed ranks to protect themselves while workers are left to carry the trauma, fear and consequences of workplace sexual harassment alone. Too often the system is designed to defend perpetrators and protect employers’ reputations while silencing workers rather than delivering justice.

End Not Defend is about changing that balance of power. Work should never come at the cost of your dignity, safety or humanity. Employers have a duty to prevent harassment, not cover it up after the damage is done.

If they fail to protect workers, there must be real accountability and real consequences.

Every worker deserves the right to go to work without fear, intimidation or abuse. That should be the absolute minimum in any civilised society.

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This blatant ignorance and lack of sufficient oversight expose employees to harm and leaves them vulnerable, and policymakers should have addressed it long ago. Ensuring that RIDDOR includes sexual harassment would go a long way towards shifting the burden away from individuals to businesses. In turn, this would help to highlight the structural risks for which employers themselves are responsible.

As a result, it would be a priority for employers to address, resolve and prevent sexual harassment in the workplace, as they already do with other potential hazards and injuries.

Labour MP John McDonnell has given his full support to the BFAWU’s policy proposal and will champion this proposed change to RIDDOR in the House of Commons.

Women deserve to feel safe at work

BFAWU are proposing that HSE introduce another category under RIDDOR framework which would allow reports of sexual harassment incidents at work, systemic or repeated patterns of behaviour and also incidents involving abuse of power. Going further, employers would have to report third-party harassment as a form of reportable harm, including sexual harassment committed by customers, clients, and contractors.

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Prevention is also better than cure – and represents a significantly overlooked vacuum of policy in our society. BFAWU are making their intention clear that they want to prevent these harms in the workplace entirely. To do this, they argue that employers should also report near misses of attempted harassment.

After all, perpetrators often escalate these predatory behaviours, creating a foreseeable harm that employers can easily prevent in practice.

Featured image via Workers Policy Project

By Maddison Wheeldon

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The Best Emma Mattress, Toppers, And Bedding Deals, May-June

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The Best Emma Mattress, Toppers, And Bedding Deals, May-June

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.

If there’s anything to make you realise you need a new bed set-up, it’s this inescapable sweltering heat.

Mattresses can get sweaty, and you might find your sheets soaked in one night (a nightmare if you find changing your sheets a snoozefest).

In other words, it may be time for an upgrade. According to The Sleep Foundation, you’ll need to replace your mattress every six to eight years, or if it’s negatively impacting your sleep.

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Well, here’s some good news for you: whether you’re in the market to replace your mattress or just want a fresher sleeping sitch, Emma currently has 25% off its entire site right now.

Until June 8th, the retailer is offering huge savings (of up to £200 in some cases) on its mattresses, mattress toppers, pillows, duvets, and even beds.

You know what that means – a ton of budget-friendly ways to upgrade your sleep set-up for summer, even if you’re not trying to buy a whole new mattress right now.

To help you make a decision, here is the HuffPost UK-approved round-up of the best products available in Emma’s Spring Sale.

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Looking for a plush mattress that won’t compromise support? Look no further than Emma’s Elite mattress, which blends memory foam with support to mould to your body shape and relieve pressure at seven targeted pressure points, all at the same time. Its cover is completely removable, so you can throw it in the washing machine and keep it fresher for longer. Plus, you won’t even need to worry about sweating in the same way, because it has two whole layers dedicated to boosting airflow throughout the mattress, so you won’t wake up sweaty and all sunk into your mattress.

Firmness: Medium soft
Layers: 7
Height: 27cm

If you’re a hot sleeper all year round, opting for a mattress with a more medium feel, like this one, could help with the night sweats. Loaded with ThermoSync, this mattress is designed specifically for temperature regulation, while still providing that same pressure relief as the Original Elite.

Firmness: Medium
Layers: 6
Height: 27cm

Not sure whether you like firm or soft? Get your brain out the gutter, I’m talking about mattress toppers, silly! As someone who’s only ever rented, it’s not like I’ve ever had much say in the feel of my mattress, but when I tried this topper out it changed the game completely. It’s two sided, with one firm and one medium, so you can try both out and find out which you prefer. Or switch between the two, it’s completely up to you.

Height: 6cm
Firmness: Soft to firm.

When you’re doing out with the old, in with the new, you might as well have a fresh start with everything – not just your mattress. This new frame is made from minimalist metal, to keep you room feeling light and airy, and has plenty of storage space if you’re an out of sight kinda person.

Again, Emma’s spoiling us for choice with this double-sided pillow. On one side, firm memory foam, for those nights when you need a little extra hold, and on the other a soft and fluffy microfibre sensation that’s akin to sleeping on a cloud.

Calling all hot sleepers (again!). This set of pillows is each coated in a layer of the brand’s Premium ThermoSync that somehow magically maintains your body’s ideal temperature so you’re not panting the second your head meets its surface. Its removable cover also wicks moisture away from your face, so that if you do sweat in the night, your skin won’t be drowning in it.

I’m a staunch believer in one item for multiple uses, and of course that translates to my duvet. I don’t want to have to take out a different duvet for the summer and winter months, so I’m grateful that this one works for every weather eventuality, thanks to the fact it comes with two layers, so you can assure yourself you’ve done the work of adding and removing heat when the temperature changes.

Feeling overwhelmed with stress isn’t exactly conducive to a good night’s sleep. Don’t worry, though, this weighted blanket is here to save the day, as its addition of your choice of seven of 13.5kg will help soothe away your troubles through the power of gravity.

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