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Donald Trump will not attend Super Bowl because it’s ‘too far away’

about 7 hours ago
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Donald Trump said he will not attend next month’s Super Bowl in northern California, citing the distance to the game, amid an ongoing culture-war backlash over the NFL’s choice of half-time and pre-game performers.Trump told the New York Post he plans to skip the 8 February championship game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara because the trip is “just too far away”, adding that he would have considered attending if it were a shorter flight.The decision means Trump will not repeat his appearance at last year’s Super Bowl in New Orleans, where he became the first sitting US president to attend the NFL’s showcase event.The president has made high-profile appearances at sporting events a regular feature of his second term, including last year’s Daytona 500, the recent college football national championship and September’s Ryder Cup at Bethpage, New York.Many of those events were held near Florida or the US east coast, within short travel distance of the White House or Trump’s Mar-a-Lago compound.

Trump also criticized the NFL’s entertainment lineup for the Super Bowl, which includes Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny as the half-time headliner and punk rock band Green Day as a pregame act.“I’m anti-them,” Trump said.“I think it’s a terrible choice.All it does is sow hatred.Terrible.

”In interviews, Trump had previously called the selection of Bad Bunny “absolutely ridiculous” and said he was unfamiliar with the artist.Bad Bunny, born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, has been a vocal critic of Trump and last year performed a month-long concert residency in Puerto Rico rather than touring the mainland United States.NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in October the league would not reconsider its decision.Speaking after the league’s owners meetings, Goodell said Bad Bunny was chosen because of his global popularity and dismissed the backlash as typical for Super Bowl entertainment.“We’re confident it’s going to be a great show,” Goodell said.

Trump said the presence of Bad Bunny and Green Day had nothing to do with his decision not to attend the game,Green Day has a long history of politically charged lyrics, and lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong has publicly criticized Trump and voiced support for protests against the administration’s immigration policies,The Super Bowl is the most-watched annual television event in the United States,Last year’s game averaged nearly 130m US viewers, according to NFL figures, with an additional 62,5m watching internationally.

The teams competing will be determined after Sunday’s conference championship games between the New England Patriots and Denver Broncos, followed by the Los Angeles Rams and Seattle Seahawks,
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Nigel Farage’s trip to Davos hosted and paid for by family trust of billionaire

Nigel Farage’s trip to Davos this week was hosted and paid for by the $10bn family trust of an Iranian-born billionaire, the Guardian has learned.The leader of Reform UK has been touring Davos this week, giving speeches in which he pledged to tax banks and “fight the globalists”.But in a surprising entry, he is listed on the programme for the World Economic Forum as a member of parliament and a representative of HP Trust, which describes itself as the “family office of Sasan Ghandehari” with a portfolio value in excess of $10bn (£7.4bn).A representative for the trust said Farage had been invited to Davos by Ghandehari, a venture capitalist, as an honorary and unpaid adviser to his impact investment portfolio focused on philanthropic activities, particularly in the Middle East

1 day ago
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UK politics: Trump’s Nato claims ‘insulting and frankly appalling’, says Starmer –as it happened

Keir Starmer has condemned Donald Trump’s claim that Nato allies did no properly fight alongside the US in Afghanistion. In a pooled clip that has just been broadcast, he sounded genuinely angry.Starmer said:Let me start by paying tribute to 457 of our armed services who lost their lives in Afghanistan.I will never forget their courage, their bravery and the sacrifice that they made for their country.There are many also who were injured, some with life-changing injuries

1 day ago
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French authorities ban British far-right activists from gathering at weekend

French authorities have announced a sweeping ban on British far-right activists planning to take part in a “stop the boats” protest against asylum seekers hoping to cross the Channel to the UK.Friday’s announcement by the prefecture in northern France goes further than a previous ban by the French interior ministry on 10 unnamed far-right activists associated with the organisation Raise the Colours for “having carried out actions on French soil”.The ban, from the Nord and Pas-de-Calais prefecture, aims to prevent British far-right activists involved in “Operation Overlord” from travelling to France this weekend. The ban comes into force at 11pm on Friday evening and continues until 8am on Monday morning.Operation Overlord was launched by Raise the Colours, an anti-migrant group placing England flags and union jacks on lamp-posts

1 day ago
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Starmer stands up to Trump at last and has chance to make case for Europe

“Serious, calm, pragmatic, behind-the-scenes diplomacy” is how No 10 has been describing Keir Starmer’s approach to the chaotic world of Donald Trump’s administration.That may have been how the week started – and tiptoeing around Trump’s volatility has been the hallmark of Starmer’s relationship with the president for a whole year. But the president’s two major digs at Britain, first over the Chagos Islands and then, more seriously, his claim that UK troops did not pull their weight in Afghanistan, have finally provoked Starmer into a furious rebuttal.Starmer’s demand for an apology over the “insulting and frankly appalling” words from an unrepentant Trump marks the worst week for US-UK relations since the president took over last year.The prime minister’s two televised press statements this week are a sign of his exasperation with Trump’s remarks about the UK – and he appeared ready at last to draw a line in the sand about what is unacceptable to say about an ally

1 day ago
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Can Andy Burnham calm the anger in a Manchester seat Labour fears losing?

When leaked WhatsApp messages sent by former minister Andrew Gwynne were published last year, Stuart Beard was astonished at the scenes outside his office in Denton town square.“There must have been about 60 pensioners with placards,” he said, referring to local anger over Gwynne’s derogatory texts, which included one saying he hoped an elderly woman who didn’t vote Labour “croaked it” before the next election.“I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Beard. “It was like a riot – it was quite funny in a way.”The circus will return to this diverse Manchester constituency after Gwynne’s resignation triggered a potentially seismic byelection that could pave the way for Andy Burnham’s much-hyped return to Westminster

1 day ago
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‘We have a clear agenda’: the teenager who broke news of Tory MP’s defection to Reform

Andrew Rosindell had been tipped as a potential Reform recruit long before his defection from the Conservatives last weekend took Westminster by surprise.Yet as he and Nigel Farage basked in the spotlight outside parliament on Monday, more than 200 miles away in the town of Whitby, North Yorkshire, a 15-year-old schoolboy was also savouring the moment.Incredibly – at least to those unfamiliar with the rise of his burgeoning media enterprise – Charlie Simpson appeared to have scooped all other media by predicting on the evening before that the Essex MP would join Reform.“EXCLUSIVE: MP Andrew Rosindell has reached an agreement to defect to Reform UK,” Charlie tweeted on Saturday, prompting derision from other users of X and pressure from Rosindell’s office to take down the tweet.But the following day, Rosindell, who was a shadow Foreign Office minister under Kemi Badenoch, announced on X he had quit the Conservative party “with sorrow” after 25 years and had decided to join Reform “following a conversation with Nigel Farage earlier in the evening”

1 day ago
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Here’s how Europe can file for divorce from Donald Trump | Phillip Inman

about 10 hours ago
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UK expected to reduce amount of steel it allows in tariff-free

about 11 hours ago
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Google AI Overviews cite YouTube more than any medical site for health queries, study suggests

about 9 hours ago
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How the ‘confident authority’ of Google AI Overviews is putting public health at risk

about 9 hours ago
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Steve Smith hits his groove – but too late for Australia’s T20 World Cup squad

about 7 hours ago
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Donald Trump will not attend Super Bowl because it’s ‘too far away’

about 7 hours ago