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Labour deputy contender Lucy Powell calls for culture change at No 10

about 23 hours ago
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Lucy Powell has called for a “change of culture” inside Keir Starmer’s Downing Street to make it more inclusive and better connected to MPs, promising that as Labour’s deputy leader she would when needed deliver difficult truths to the prime minister.Speaking to the Guardian after she secured 117 MP nominations in the battle to replace Angela Rayner, Powell said a sequence of what she called “unforced errors” by the government had left many Labour MPs and members frustrated.Powell now faces a vote of party members against Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, who reached 175 endorsements and is viewed as No 10’s preferred choice to take on the role.Powell was Commons leader until she was sacked from the government in last week’s reshuffle, a decision she said was a complete shock, and for which she had as yet received no explanation.She said she believed it could be because she sometimes passed on MPs’ concerns to Downing Street, and that if elected she would hope to continue such a “shop steward” role, making the government less factional and closed-off.

“We need some change, and we do need a change of culture, especially how we’re going about making decisions, and how we’re going about including people,” she said.“I really, really want this Labour government to succeed, and we’re at our best when we use all the talents that we’ve got, all the voices that we’ve got, the experience that we’ve got, to make better decisions and have fewer unforced errors, mistakes that are really frustrating people.“We’ve got a bit of a groupthink happening at the top, that culture of not being receptive to interrogation, not being receptive to differing views.But it’s a show of strength, a show of being effective, when you are receptive to interrogation and accountability and differing views, and then you come to better decisions.”Concerns about a seemingly clique-ridden and unresponsive Downing Street operation are common among Labour MPs, and while some blame senior No 10 staff such as Morgan McSweeney, Powell said Starmer must also take responsibility.

Asked if he had a part in this, she said: “Culture is set at the top, of course it is.” Powell said, however, that her aim was to be constructive, and help avoid errors such as the U-turn over changes to disability benefits and winter fuel payments, and the initial defence of Peter Mandelson before he was sacked as UK ambassador to Washington.“What I don’t want to do is stand at the sidelines, filling the airwaves with criticism of the government,” she said.“I really want this government to succeed, but I’m not afraid to speak truth where that truth needs to be spoken.In the main, I would hope to do that within the family – and let’s have a broad family.

“People are frustrated at the moment.There are issues, no doubt about that.I want to make sure that our MPs and our Labour members feel proud and enthused with what this government is doing, so they can be the best champions for it they can be.“I think that to do that, we need to be more inclusive, we need to respect and take on board the broad church that is the Labour party.”Reaching the members’ ballot caps a tumultuous week for Powell, who lost her job in the reshuffle prompted by Rayner’s resignation over the underpayment of stamp duty.

She said MPs’ reaction to her sacking had prompted her to think she should stand, saying a number asked if she could somehow continue her liaison role within the backbenches.She said: “I thought, actually, it’s probably going to be only me or someone being backed by the machine of the leadership that can get on the ballot here.So I think I’m going to have to put myself forward.”Returning to the subject of whether her occasional relaying of MPs’ views to No 10 had played a role in leaving the cabinet, she said: “No one has given me that feedback, and I have asked for it.I’d try and feed back concerns, and try and feed back the mood, and maybe that wasn’t received well.

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Shrinking audiences, a cash crisis and rivals on the rise: what’s gone wrong at Tate?

When a national institution starts to sound like Spın̈al Tap, you know it’s in trouble.Recently, Tate channelled the mythic rock band’s claim that its audience was not shrinking, just “becoming more selective”. In response to a decline in visitor numbers and a cash crisis leading to redundancies, the museum group emphasised “record numbers of young visitors” to Tate Modern (who cares about all those uncool visitors above the age of 35?).Yet in the summer, Tate’s director, Maria Balshaw, blamed the group’s problems on a dearth of 16-24-year-old visitors from continental Europe. So they appeal to youth, but the wrong youth?This week, Tate Modern will open a blockbuster show that may attract paying adults

1 day ago
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Protesters target Royal Opera House over performance by ‘Putin’s diva’

Dozens of protesters have gathered outside the Royal Opera House to demonstrate against an eminent Russian opera singer nicknamed “Putin’s diva” who performed on the opening night of Tosca.Anna Netrebko, 53, one of the world’s best-known sopranos, who draws full houses for her performances at leading opera houses globally, has denied being an ally of the Russian leader.She was ostracised by most major opera houses in the months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, despite releasing a statement unequivocally condemning the conflict.Netrebko, who has not performed in Russia since 2022, was given a People’s Artist award in 2008 by Vladimir Putin. The crowd of about 50 protesters congregated outside the central London venue included Natalia Filatova, 48, who was wrapped in the Ukrainian flag

1 day ago
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And if your head explodes: Pink Floyd’s 20 best songs – ranked!

Fifty years after the release of Wish You Were Here, we count down the best of the band’s Syd Barrett years, their difficult recovery and later reunionLow on memorable tunes, big on racked, strangulated lead vocals, possessed of a worldview that makes every other Pink Floyd album look like a gushing font of Pollyanna-ish optimism, The Final Cut is a slog. But The Gunner’s Dream cuts through the gloom, thanks to a heartbreaking, fragile melody.Overshadowed by the albums that preceded and followed it, Obscured by Clouds might be the most underrated release in Pink Floyd’s catalogue: it boasts fantastic instrumental experiments, musical signposts to The Dark Side of the Moon and, in Wot’s … Uh the Deal?, a beautifully careworn, Beatles-y ballad undersold by its daft title.The studio half of Ummagumma is a mess – a band audibly searching for direction without success – but it contains one unequivocal triumph: Roger Waters’ evocation of the parkland on the banks of the River Cam, its pastoral calm spiked with a curious sense of menace, as if something nasty is lurking in the undergrowth.The More soundtrack throws up everything from proto-heavy metal and mock-flamenco to bongo solos

2 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Charlie Kirk shooting: ‘Political violence only leads to more political violence’

Late-night hosts respond to the shooting of Charlie Kirk and assess Donald Trump’s denials of a sexually suggestive birthday letter to Jeffrey Epstein from 2003.Stephen Colbert opened his show on Wednesday with an acknowledgement of the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the rightwing activist and Trump adviser who was shot and killed at age 31 during an event in Utah on Wednesday afternoon. “Our condolences go out to his family, and all of his loved ones,” said Colbert.“I’m old enough to personally remember the political violence of the 1960s,” the Late Show host added. “And I hope it is obvious to everyone in America that political violence does not solve any of our political differences

2 days ago
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Jerry Seinfeld compares Free Palestine movement to Ku Klux Klan

Jerry Seinfeld denounced the Free Palestine movement as antisemitic and likened its rhetoric to that of the Ku Klux Klan during a surprise appearance at Duke University.“Free Palestine is, to me, just … you’re free to say you don’t like Jews. Just say you don’t like Jews,” the 71-year-old comedian said on stage, according to the Duke University Chronicle.“By saying ‘Free Palestine’, you’re not admitting what you really think,” he continued. “So it’s actually – compared to the Ku Klux Klan, I’m actually thinking the Klan is actually a little better here, because they can come right out and say, ‘We don’t like Blacks, we don’t like Jews

3 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s Epstein letter: ‘A Picasso of pervitude’

Late-night hosts reacted to Donald Trump’s birthday drawing for Jeffrey Epstein in 2003, and his visit on Monday to the Museum of the Bible.Stephen Colbert has kept close tabs on the US president’s never-ending Jeffrey Epstein scandal, and on Tuesday, he noted: “The story of his disturbing friendship with Jeffrey Epstein keeps getting more.”Earlier this summer, the Wall Street Journal reported that back in 2003, Trump provided a lewd letter and cartoon to a book celebrating Epstein’s birthday – a “Picasso of pervitude”, as the Late Show host put it. The Journal reported that the note was framed by a doodle of a naked woman, and featured Trump’s squiggly signature “below her waist, mimicking pubic hair”.The note read, in part: “Happy birthday – and may every day be another wonderful secret

3 days ago
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As US edges closer to stagflation, economists blame Trump policies

about 4 hours ago
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Sainsbury’s recalls two own-brand hummus varieties over E coli fears

about 5 hours ago
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UK workers wary of AI despite Starmer’s push to increase uptake, survey finds

about 10 hours ago
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AI content needs to be labelled to protect us | Letters

2 days ago
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World Athletics Championships: big names and Brits impress in women’s 100m heats, women’s 10,000m final and more – live

about 3 hours ago
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Brisbane v Gold Coast: AFL 2025 second semi-final – live

about 3 hours ago