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politicsSee all
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‘Am I at peak popularity? I hope not’: on the road with Zack Polanski, from protest to podcast to Heaven nightclub

17 JANUARY 2026“I’m dying for a wee,” Zack Polanski says as he gets off the train at Wakefield Westgate. Why didn’t you go on the train, I ask? “It was very busy and too many people recognised me on the way to the toilet. I knew I’d never get there for all the conversations, so I came back.” When did it become hard for him to go to the toilet on a train? “2 September,” he says. “The day I was elected

about 17 hours ago
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‘I’m British, English and British Asian’, says Rishi Sunak in riposte to racially charged debate over identity

Rishi Sunak has described himself as being “British, English and British Asian” in a riposte to increasing racially charged language used by figures on the right.The UK’s first British Asian prime minister was speaking after his identity was questioned in recent debate sparked by a claim by the podcaster Konstantin Kisin that Sunak was not English because he was a “brown-skinned Hindu”.Suella Braverman, the London-born Reform MP and former home secretary, later appeared to give credence to Kisin’s claims by saying that she was not English and questioning whether others born in the country could necessarily have that identity.More recently, Matthew Goodwin, Reform UK’s candidate in the upcoming Gorton and Denton byelection, refused to disown a claim that UK-born people from minority ethnic backgrounds were not necessarily British.Speaking out for the first time since those interventions, the Southampton-born former Conservative leader said the racism directed at him and his siblings was “seared in his memory” and warned against Britain “slipping back” to a time when racism was more overt

1 day ago
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Minister commissioned investigation of journalists looking into Labour thinktank

A Labour minister commissioned and reviewed a report in 2023 on journalists investigating the thinktank that would help propel Keir Starmer to power, the Guardian has learned.The research was paid for and subsequently reviewed by Josh Simons, now a minister in the Cabinet Office, when he was director of Labour Together, according to sources and documents seen by the Guardian.Simons is close to the prime minister’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, who had previously run Labour Together and whose own role in the operation to gather material on journalists is under scrutiny.In an agreement addressed to Simons, drawn up by the PR firm APCO Worldwide, the firm agreed to “investigate the sourcing, funding and origins” of a November 2023 Sunday Times report about the thinktank, in addition to other journalistic investigations into the group.The agreement noted APCO would “establish who and what are behind the coordinated attacks on Labour Together”

1 day ago
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Reform faces police investigation over ‘concerned neighbour’ byelection letters

Reform UK will face a police investigation in Gorton and Denton after admitting it sent out letters from a “concerned neighbour” which did not state they had been funded and distributed by the party.Greater Manchester police confirmed it had received a report about the breach of electoral law and said it would investigate. The Electoral Commission said the omission was a matter for the police, stressing that failing “to include an imprint in candidate election material is an offence”.Dozens of voters in the Gorton and Denton constituency reported receiving letters from a pensioner written in a handwriting-style font on Friday. The letters do not include an imprint saying who they have been funded and distributed by, as required by electoral law

1 day ago
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Mandelson lobbying firm sought work with Russia and China state companies, Epstein emails show

Peter Mandelson’s former lobbying firm sought work with companies controlled by the governments of Russia and China shortly after he left ministerial office, according to emails the disgraced former minister forwarded to the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.The emails show how Mandelson and Benjamin Wegg-Prosser scrambled to drum up high-paying foreign business after co-founding Global Counsel even as Mandelson remained a member of the House of Lords. Potential clients included the Russian state investment firm Rusnano and the state-owned China International Capital Corporation, the emails suggest.The emails also showed that Wegg-Prosser met Epstein at his New York townhouse in 2010 to discuss the business. A person with knowledge of the situation said the meeting was at Mandelson’s request and only lasted 25 minutes

1 day ago
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Gordon Brown ‘deeply regrets’ bringing Peter Mandelson into his government

Gordon Brown has said he deeply regrets bringing Peter Mandelson into his government, and that revelations about Jeffrey Epstein’s influence on UK politics had caused him revulsion.Writing in the Guardian, Brown said the news that Mandelson was passing information to Epstein while he was business secretary was “a betrayal of everything we stand for as a country”.Brown said he was at fault for making Mandelson a peer and bringing him back into government in 2008, after Mandelson had quit as an MP to become EU trade commissioner.“I have to take personal responsibility for appointing Mandelson to his ministerial role in 2008. I greatly regret this appointment,” he wrote, saying that at the time he was told that Mandelson’s record in Brussels had been “unblemished” and he did not know about any Epstein links

1 day ago
sportSee all
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Early crash disrupts US favorite Jessie Diggins in race for skiathlon gold

about 8 hours ago
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‘My ACL is 100% gone’: Lindsey Vonn’s improbable comeback at 41 is just another risk

about 9 hours ago
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Bangers and smash: Von Allmen wins first gold of Winter Olympics to fulfil butcher’s dream

about 10 hours ago
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‘It made me cry’: your favourite moments from past Winter Olympics

about 10 hours ago
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One battle after another: Sam Darnold’s stubborn route to the Super Bowl

about 12 hours ago
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Winter Olympics briefing: opening ceremony delivers a love letter to Italy

about 15 hours ago

Labour thinktank close to Morgan McSweeney paid firm to investigate journalists

1 day ago
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A thinktank previously run by a Labour minister and the prime minister’s chief of staff paid a PR firm to investigate journalists who were looking into its funding, according to documents seen by the Guardian.Labour Together, once run by Morgan McSweeney and then by Josh Simons, now a Cabinet Office minister, hired APCO Worldwide to investigate journalists from the Guardian, the Sunday Times and other outlets and to identify their sources, documents suggest.A memo produced for Labour Together, first reported by the Substack publication Democracy For Sale, lists journalists who are viewed as “significant persons of interest” over articles about undeclared donations during McSweeney’s time at the thinktank.It adds: “It is important to identify the source of the information and to ascertain what additional information could be published.”McSweeney left Labour Together in 2020 when he joined Keir Starmer’s team.

He remained close to the thinktank, which was a key ally of Starmer as he led Labour to election victory in 2024.Simons was director of Labour Together when APCO was hired.Sources close to McSweeney said he had not taken the decision to hire APCO and it was a matter for Labour Together.The Guardian has approached Simons, Labour Together, the Labour party and APCO for comment.In response to the allegations, Labour MP John McDonnell called for his party to launch an inquiry into Labour Together and those in the party connected to it.

In a letter to Hollie Ridley, the party’s general secretary, on Friday, McDonnell called the investigation of journalists “truly shocking” and added: “If the reports of [Labour Together’s] activities in surveilling journalists are accurate it is clear that this organisation and its operators and controllers are bringing our party into disrepute.”The allegations come as McSweeney faces severe pressure over his role in Downing Street in the aftermath of new disclosures about Peter Mandelson in the Epstein files.Downing Street has rejected calls for his removal, but Labour backbenchers say his role in Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador makes his position as the prime minister’s most senior aide untenable.Documents seen by the Guardian suggest APCO was hired in 2023, when Simons ran Labour Together, after the Sunday Times had published an investigation into the organisation that alleged McSweeney had failed to declare more than £700,000 in donations to the thinktank between 2017 and 2020.The money is said to have paid for polling and campaigning that supported Starmer’s rise to the Labour leadership.

Labour Together was fined £14,250 in September 2021 over late reporting of £740,000 of donations after the organisation reported itself to the Electoral Commission for failures to declare the money in 2020.Internal reports prepared by APCO Worldwide for Labour Together name the Sunday Times journalists Gabriel Pogrund and Harry Yorke, as well as the Guardian’s Henry Dyer, Declassified’s John McEvoy and journalists from other outlets as subjects and discuss potential “leverage” over other reporters.Dyer broke the story of the Electoral Commission’s investigation into Labour Together in 2021.Democracy for Sale alleges that the thinktank paid the PR firm at least £30,000 to identify the source of stories about its funding.The briefings supplied to Labour Together by APCO claim that one possible source of the Sunday Times story was a Russian or Chinese hack of the Electoral Commission.

One of the documents says: “After a review of publicly available information, there appears to be two potential sources for the information about Labour Together’s funding that appeared in the Times article: a leak from someone within the Electoral Commission or Labour Together to the author; or illegally gathered information collected from the 2023 hack of the Electoral Commission that has been passed on to the author.”Another report by APCO for Labour Together is reportedly titled: “Executive summary: investigation into Shadow World Investigations,” which is a a London-based investigative outlet run by the South African journalists Paul Holden and Andrew Feinstein.Holden collaborated on the Sunday Times story about Labour Together’s finances.