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MPs and political candidates face ‘industrial’ levels of abuse, minister says

about 22 hours ago
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MPs and political candidates are facing “industrial” levels of intimidation and harassment, a minister has warned, as the government outlines plans for stricter punishments for those found guilty of abuse.Rushanara Ali, the minister for democracy, said her colleagues were suffering worse harassment than ever before and warned this was deterring many young people from becoming politically active.With two MPs having been killed in recent years and multiple candidates saying they were harassed during last year’s election campaign, the government says it is acting before further acts of violence are committed.“In the time that I’ve been an MP, we’ve lost colleagues – my friend Jo Cox, Sir David Amess,” Ali said.“We also had the horrific situation of Stephen Timms being attacked in the first week that I was elected in 2010.

“What we’ve seen is the level of abuse and hostility increasing to the point where in last year’s general election, there was industrial-scale abuse and threats and intimidation – creating a chilling effect on our democracy.”She added: “Week in, week out, I hear of colleagues across different parties – particularly women, but not exclusively – being threatened and intimidated.”Ali was one of several candidates, several of them Muslim women, to be targeted by pro-Palestinian activists during last year’s election.Videos showed campaigners following and shouting at her supporters in Bethnal Green, east London, while another image showed a fake Labour leaflet depicting her with devil horns.Her colleague Shabana Mahmood had to call the police twice in the course of one weekend to complain about harassment while out canvassing.

But MPs say the harassment is not related to a single political cause, and is due more to a fragmented electorate who increasingly distrust their MPs while finding it easier than ever to contact or find them,Cox was killed by a far-right terrorist in 2016 and Amess by a supporter of Islamic State in 2021,A report by the Electoral Commission after last year’s election found that 55% said they had experienced some kind of problem with harassment, intimidation or abuse, and 13% said the problem was serious,Vijay Rangarajan, the head of the commission, said earlier this year: “Addressing the abuse and intimidation targeted at candidates and elected officials is crucial to safeguarding individuals and their families, but also the health of the UK democracy more widely,”A separate report by a panel of MPs convened by the Commons speaker, Lindsay Hoyle, warned: “The nature of threats and abuse facing politicians today is a significant change from recent history and current trends suggest it could get worse.

”Ali said she had received multiple death threats in the last year,“Only yesterday I received a threat to torture and kill me,” she said, adding that she had received similar threats via email and through the post during the election campaign,“A number of colleagues have had that sort of experience,” she said,“So we’ve got to make sure that our democracy is safe and that people are protected when they decide to enter public life,“I spent my whole life campaigning to encourage people into politics, young people, women, people from diverse backgrounds, men and women.

And I fear that if we don’t take action, then more and more people will be put off,”Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionAli said the government would take three concrete measures to make life easier for candidates and their supporters, and to discourage people from harassing those involved in politics,The measures will be included in an elections strategy paper, with the aim of including them in a bill at an unspecified point during this parliament,The first is that candidates will no longer be required to publish their home addresses on election material,At present, people standing for parliament have the option to remove their addresses from nomination forms, but not if they are acting as their own agents, which some do.

The government’s changes will allow everyone, including council candidates, to remove their addresses from the forms even if they are their own agents,It will not go as far as recommended by the MPs on Hoyle’s panel, however, who said that even the option of including home addresses on election forms should be removed,Second, ministers plan to change legal guidance so that it will be considered an aggravating factor if someone is found guilty of harassing a candidate, campaigner or staff member,This will allow judges to hand down tougher sentences to those offenders,Finally, the government is planning to change the law to ban those found guilty of intimidating or abusing a candidate from standing themselves as a candidate in future.

The measures reflect some, but not all, of the recommendations made by Hoyle’s group of MPs in their report.That panel also suggested giving MPs protection by the Home Office during an election campaign, introducing ID and address checks for all candidates, and allowing returning officers to expand the exclusion zone around a polling station under certain circumstances.Ali said: “It cannot be right that MPs, councillors and other others who seek public office are threatened with murder.Sadly, that climate of hostility has led to us losing two of our colleagues.“This is about making sure that those people who are in public life, and those who seek to be in public life … receive the protection they need, and that people aren’t put off politics.

Because we are seeing increasing evidence of people not wanting to be in public life, not wanting to be in politics.”
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The Guide #198: Such Brave Girls shows that grown-up gross-out comedy is thriving

The best binge-watches should make you feel a little bit sick while you gorge on them, and Kat Sadler’s sitcom Such Brave Girls, which just returned for a second season on BBC Three and iPlayer, certainly fits that description. I found myself burning through episodes, the enjoyment of them tempered with the slightest top note of nausea.That isn’t a criticism of the series, which follows the chaotically bleak existence of adult sisters Josie (Sadler) and Billie (Lizzie Davidson), still living at home with their wild-eyed mother, Deb (Louise Brealey). In fact it’s the intended reaction. From its logo (the title of the show made out in strands of wet hair slithering across bathroom tiles) onwards, Such Brave Girls is built to shock, unsettle and gross out, but above all be laughed at

1 day ago
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‘What should be taught in schools?’: the infamous ‘Scopes monkey trial’ turns 100

Her great-grandfather was a doctor called to attend to the lawyer who put the case for creationism. Her great-grandmother was related to Charles Darwin. And now she works in the courthouse where the “trial of the century” – in which a high school teacher was accused of illegally teaching evolution – began exactly a century ago on Thursday.No one has a perspective on the “Scopes monkey trial” quite like Pat Guffey, a former high school biology teacher in Dayton, Tennessee. As the city prepares to mark the centenary with a week-long festival including a dramatic re-enactment of the court battle, she is aware how its legacy proved both a blessing and a curse

2 days ago
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Comedian Paul Smith: ‘People get disappointed when they meet me in real life. I’m really quiet’

The scouse standup’s cheeky takedowns of his audiences have earned him viral fame, 1.2 million Instagram followers and a string of sold-out arena shows. But is that the real him? Far from it, he saysAt the Hot Water Comedy Club in Liverpool, Paul Smith’s standup double-header feels like a pop star’s homecoming. Women are wearing his tour T-shirts as dresses and the bar is half a dozen deep with fans hoping to get roasted by the local comic famous for his audience takedowns. There are first-daters, girls’ night outs, lads’ night outs, tourists, locals, couples, mothers and their grownup sons clamouring for a spot on the front row

3 days ago
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Clash of cultures: exhibition tells story of when Vikings ruled the north of England

Viking North at Yorkshire Museum features UK’s largest exhibition of Viking-age artefacts, including era’s ‘cheap’ jewellery and evidence of slave-owningWhen Anglo-Saxons buried their jewellery in an attempt to keep it safe from marauding Vikings, it is unlikely they envisaged their treasures would be dug up a millennium later and studied by their descendants.Nor would they have expected the items to sit alongside everyday objects owned by their Scandinavian oppressors as part of the largest exhibition of Viking-age artefacts in the UK, aiming to tell the story for the first time of the invaders’ power base in the north of England.“This is the finest collection of objects from Viking-age England that you can see on display in a museum in this country,” says Dr Adam Parker, curator of archaeology at York Museums Trust.Viking North, which opens on Friday, focuses on the settlement of the Viking Great Army, as it is known, which arrived in the north of England from Scandinavia in AD866 and spent two centuries controlling the territory.Among the exhibits are examples of the Vikings’ great wealth, some of which appeared to be raided from holy sites, such as an Anglo-Saxon silver-gilt bowl with Christian symbolism on it found buried with a Viking warrior

3 days ago
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Notting Hill carnival to go ahead this year after £1m funding boost

Cash will pay for extra measures to address ‘critical public safety concerns’ identified in independent review of festival Notting Hill carnival will go ahead this year after almost £1m of funding was raised to provide extra safety and infrastructure measures.City Hall, Kensington and Chelsea council and Westminster city council together provided £958,000 for the event following pleas from organisers for support, after a review recommended several changes to make the event safe.The chair of Notting Hill Carnival Ltd, Ian Comfort, who had appealed to the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, for additional support, said the event’s future was secured just in time.The event always takes place over the August bank holiday weekend – which this year runs from Saturday 23 August to Monday 25 August.“Although this support comes just weeks before the event, it is a much-needed and welcome commitment,” Comfort said

3 days ago
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Jon Stewart on Trump’s sweeping bill: ‘What is Ice going to do when they have real money?’

Late-night hosts delve into Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” and consider his UFC proposal for next Independence Day.Jon Stewart returned to The Daily Show following the Fourth of July holiday in the US, during which Congress and Trump passed the so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill Act”. The legislation will, among other things, cut $930bn from the Medicaid budget, thus putting 11 million at risk of losing their health insurance, end Biden-era green energy credits and cut funding for 3 million kids’ school lunches.“It’s a lot of painful cuts on a lot of vulnerable populations,” Stewart summarized on Monday’s Daily Show. “But, to be fair, at least America will finally make a dent on the deficit

4 days ago
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World must be more wary than ever of China’s growing economic power

about 11 hours ago
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‘The Co-op won’t defeat me’: Brighton shop owners fight against eviction

about 16 hours ago
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Louis Vuitton says UK customer data stolen in cyber-attack

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The CEO who never was: how Linda Yaccarino was set up to fail at Elon Musk’s X

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Iga Swiatek hopes critics will ‘just leave her alone now’ after Wimbledon glory

about 7 hours ago
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Shubman Gill boils over at Zak Crawley but ‘it’s just part of the game’ for KL Rahul

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