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‘Worst year in memory’: parties describe climate of abuse on campaign trail for May elections

about 17 hours ago
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Candidates and political parties have described a climate of abuse in this year’s local and devolved elections, including death threats and intimidation while campaigning,Politicians from a range of parties have reported abuse and harassment in the lead-up to the elections in England, Scotland and Wales, with the Green party describing this year’s campaign as the worst in memory,Labour’s Dan Jarvis, the security minister, condemned “the rising tide of vile abuse, harassment and intimidation aimed towards elected officials and candidates” online and in person,“Anyone engaging in this sort of behaviour is directly attacking our democracy and we all must do more to stop it becoming normalised,” he said,A spokesperson for the Green party said some candidates had received death threats or been “yelled at or chased down the street”, and some had withdrawn from campaigning in certain areas due to harassment.

“Anecdotally, this has been the worst year in memory,” the spokesperson said.They said the party had been “a focus at this election more than ever before”, with “some wildly false claims being made about the party and its representatives, which some members of the public have accepted on face value”.It is unknown how widespread abuse and harassment has been on the campaign trail this year.The Electoral Commission will publish its report on the 2026 elections, including its findings on abuse and intimidation, in the autumn.Before the elections, the Electoral Commission said: “Candidates at elections have been subject to unacceptable abuse while campaigning in recent years.

”Its most recent candidate research found that 61% of respondents, who were candidates in the 2025 local elections in England, experienced harassment or security threats during the campaign and 71% said they avoided some campaign activity because of fear of abuse.The abuse has occurred across political divides.The Reform UK leader, Nigel Farage, criticised Elon Musk in April after detailing how his party’s candidates from minority ethnic backgrounds were being subjected to “utterly appalling abuse” on X, which Musk owns.This week the Labour mayor of the West Midlands, Richard Parker, told the BBC he had been threatened and followed while campaigning in Coventry.The Scottish Trades Union Congress released a statement on Tuesday condemning “reports of increased racial and Islamophobic harassment of candidates in the run-up to the Scottish parliament elections”, while a spokesperson for Plaid Cymru said online discourse had “become increasingly toxic”.

In two separate incidents in April in Birmingham, a Green party candidate said he was accosted by campaigners supporting an independent group of candidates.Hanooshi Hassan, who was leafleting at a mosque at the time, said he was threatened by one individual and was repeatedly told by the group that the Green party was the “gay party”.“There was homophobia immediately,” he said.“They were being very loud and boisterous, calling us the gay party and saying that we want to turn their kids gay.”He added: “One of the men … threatened to beat me up.

” West Midlands police confirmed they had received two reports of alleged harassment on 17 and 24 April on Dudley Road and said inquiries were continuing.Bishop Desmond Jaddoo, who is running as an independent candidate in Birmingham and is not aligned with the group involved in the incident with Hassan, said he had received sustained racial abuse, mainly online, during the campaign.In one incident after Jaddoo distributed leaflets on Monday, he said he was told by an unknown caller: “Listen you black bastard, do not put anything else through my letterbox.I’m voting Reform.”Jaddoo said much of the abuse he received online was “fuelled by rightwing rhetoric”.

“I think the way political parties are speaking, they are stoking racial discrimination and they are damaging race relations in this country,” he said.The Jo Cox Foundation, which was founded after the Labour MP Jo Cox was murdered in 2016 by a far-right extremist, said there were clear signs the problem was getting worse.“Too many candidates, their families and their teams, from all sides of the political spectrum, have experienced abuse, harassment and threats during this year’s elections,” said Olivia Field, the organisation’s chief executive.“This represents one of the biggest threats to the functioning of our democracy.“Increasingly, people do not feel safe enough to fully participate in politics.

Some are choosing not to stand at all, while others are self-censoring or limiting how they engage with voters.Elections should be a contest of ideas, not an endurance test against intimidation.”
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Oil back over $100 as US-Iran ceasefire comes under pressure; British Airways’ parent company warns jet fuel could be ‘restricted’ – business live

The pound, and UK government bonds, are holding up well despite the governing Labour party having a bad local election.Sterling has risen by a third of a cent against the US dollar to $1.3585, holding those gains after prime minister Keir Starmer told the media “I’m not going to walk away,” after Labour lost hundreds of council seats, with counting continuing in many places.UK bond prices have dropped slightly, pushing up the yield (or interest rate) on gilts slightly. That, though, may reflect concerns that the higher oil prices will push up inflation and hurt growth

about 1 hour ago
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GameStop CEO opens eBay storefront to pay for potential eBay acquisition

The CEO of GameStop, Ryan Cohen, said he was selling vintage video games, baseball cards, GameStop merchandise and a $14,000 pair of tube socks to help fund the company’s proposed $55.5bn acquisition of eBay.His platform of choice? eBay, of course.Cohen posted a link to his eBay storefront on Tuesday night, saying: “I’m selling stuff on eBay to pay for eBay.”Hours later, Cohen posted a screenshot with a notification that his account had been suspended

about 12 hours ago
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‘Being human helps’: despite rise of AI is there still hope for Europe’s translators?

In February 2022, while he was plugging away at rendering the US writer Dana Spiotta’s novel Wayward into French, the literary translator Yoann Gentric decided he needed a bit of light relief. He would test whether AI could put him out of work.Gentric had been grappling with a short non-verbal sentence that described the book’s protagonist’s feelings upon opening a window: “Bright, sharp night air, bracing.” He put the prompt into DeepL, a neural-network-powered machine translation engine that regularly outperforms Google Translate in accuracy assessments.The proposed translation was reassuring, with his job security in mind: L’air de la nuit, vif et vif, était vivifiant (The night air, lively and lively, was enlivening

about 5 hours ago
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UK schools should remove pupils’ online photos as AI blackmail threat grows, say experts

UK schools should remove pictures of pupils’ faces from their websites and social media accounts because blackmailers are using them to create sexually explicit images, experts have said.Child safety experts and the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) warn that criminals are using AI to manipulate photos of children and then demand cash not to publish them.They are recommending educational institutions remove identifiable pictures of children from their websites and social media accounts – or consider not using them at all.The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) said an unnamed UK secondary school had recently been subjected to a blackmail attempt after criminals used the institution’s website or social media accounts to take photos of schoolchildren and then, using AI tools, turned them into child sexual abuse material (CSAM). The blackmailers sent the images to the school and threatened to publish them online if they did not receive money

about 10 hours ago
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Chess: Magnus Carlsen enjoys narrow win in Malmö during rare classical outing

The world No 1, Magnus Carlsen, making a rare return to classical chess this week at the annual TePe Sigeman tournament in Malmö, Sweden, squeezed through to a blitz ­playoff in Thursday’s final round after ­Turkey’s 14-year-old ­talent Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus ­blundered fatally in the late stages after reaching a drawn position.Carlsen tied on 5/7 with India’s Arjun Erigaisi and won the blitz playoff 2-1. This was the final sudden death game.Earlier, Carlsen was defeated in Monday’s fourth round in a ­fluctuating marathon 88-move game by the Netherlands GM Jorden van Foreest, whose predatory rook finally trapped a Carlsen knight which had wandered too far from base. It was a grind of a type which Carlsen himself has won many times in his career

about 2 hours ago
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LIV Golf and Bryson DeChambeau tee off new era but cannot escape Saudi shadow

Moments before Bryson DeChambeau teed off to open LIV Golf’s first American tournament of the year, at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia, the public address announcer bellowed “Long! LIV! Golf!” to try and electrify a modest crowd by the first tee.The irony wasn’t lost on the devoted group who skirted work and school to enjoy a sunny afternoon just 25 miles outside Washington DC: this was the first tournament since the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund confirmed it would no longer fund the outfit that it once imagined as the world’s premier collection of professional golfers. Before that news was finalized, the league postponed a tournament scheduled to take place in New Orleans at the end of June.“We have a good runway through this season fortunately,” LIV’s chief executive, Scott O’Neil, said during a press conference on Tuesday. “And it’s for next year that we’re going to be making some pretty significant, substantive changes

about 11 hours ago
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