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Carabao Cup final, WSL and more Premier League drama – follow with us

about 5 hours ago
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Normally the Premier League weekend starts here, but David Tindall will have the reaction to Friday night’s Bournemouth v Manchester United game as well as the buildup to the day’s action.He will be looking at the fallout from Thomas Tuchel’s England squad selection, as well as looking forward to the day’s four Premier League games.It’s a full-on day in the Championship, too, with Middlesbrough’s recent stumbles opening up third-placed Ipswich’s shot at automatic promotion – except they are at home to a fourth-placed Millwall side motivated by injustice, after losing against Blackburn in a game that turned on a red card that was subsequently annulled.Send your thoughts on anything to do with the day’s games to matchday.live@theguardian.

com Read nowDo we have a WSL title race? Manchester City could only draw at Aston Villa last weekend, and the pack have a chance to put a bit of pressure on them if the leaders slip up again at home to Tottenham,Chelsea at least closed to within seven points in midweek and are at London City Lionesses, while Arsenal – four points worse off than Chelsea but with two games in hand – are at struggling West Ham,Emillia Hawkins will have all the goals from those matches plus the visit of Everton to Manchester United, who will regret only drawing at West Ham on Wednesday when they could have cut City’s lead to six points,As Ed Aarons wrote in our things to look out for this weekend: “The Amex has not been a happy hunting ground for Liverpool in recent years: they have won only once at the ground in their last five visits and that was in the Carabao Cup last season,” Can Brighton – who like the Reds have three wins in their last five league matches – frustrate Arne Slot’s men again? When the sides met on the south coast last May, the visitors had been partying as champions so the late defeat barely stung, but losing again would threaten their top-five hopes.

Scott Murray follows the action minute-by-minute, while Sam Cunningham reports from Sussex by the sea.“O tempora, O mores,” as Cicero would say: there is only one Premier League game with the traditional kick-off time this weekend, as European outsiders Fulham take on a Burnley side who would love to have that status.But there are seven Championship games, with teams hoping to respond to or take advantage of results in the lunchtime matches, while Southampton, at home to Oxford, and Wrexham, at Sheffield United, will keep an eye on each other on the edge of the playoff zone.In Scotland, the three title contenders have staggered kick-off times, with Hearts getting the chance to put pressure on Rangers (an evening match) and Celtic (in Sunday’s game).Billy Munday is at the helmNot a fixture noted for its historical needle but recent quasi-judicial announcements have spiced up the first staging at Hill Dickinson Stadium.

As Andy Hunter writes: “It is a fine coincidence that Chelsea’s first Premier League game since being fined for breaching financial rules during Roman Abramovich’s ownership should be at Everton, the club the Premier League made an example of when reinforcing its authority over disobedient members.” Andy himself will be on match report duty, while Rob Smyth will be listening out for the pointed chants as the game goes on.Only five points separate the sides, and a home win would cap a painful week for Liam Rosenior, despite his successful mole hunt.The day’s last Premier League game features two managers who have defied expectations.Keith Andrews was seen as having a stiff task after succeeding Thomas Frank at Brentford, with key players having left and no experience of the top job, but has fared rather better than the Dane did at Tottenham.

Daniel Farke, meanwhile, seemed to be on his way out of Leeds in December but only four defeats in their past 20 games has turned things around in the league and brought an FA Cup quarter-final.Leeds are only three points clear of the drop zone, mind, and Brentford need points to reach Europe.Dominic Booth will give live updates, while Will Unwin reports from Elland Road.With all due respect to Saturday’s combatants, Sunday has the three games that are the pick of the weekend, and Emillia Hawkins will have all the buildup.There’s the north-east championship match as Newcastle host Sunderland; there’s Tottenham v Nottingham Forest in the archetypal relegation six-pointer; and there’s Arsenal v Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final.

Plus, she will have reaction to all Saturday’s matches.Email matchday.live@theguardian.com with your views.It was a sobering week for Newcastle, after a promising start at Barcelona as they twice equalised gave way to a humiliating 7-2 (seven-two) scoreline.

Still, Jacob Ramsey’s pass for the seventh was surely not the most embarrassing moment of Newcastle’s season: that honour lies with Nick Woltemade’s headed own goal that decided December’s derby.The chances of a rematch with Barça any time soon look remote, but luckily for Eddie Howe there is a shot at parochial redemption when Sunderland visit the Toon at noon.Luke McLaughlin steers the live blog, while Louise Taylor is at St James’ Park.A clash between the two sides immediately above the relegation zone kicking off at the same time as the team just below them are playing – meaning anyone losing this match could be in the bottom three at the final whistle – is one to have the fans sweating.Spurs and Forest arrive bolstered by European victories, albeit the former still went out of the Champions League despite a first win for Igor Tudor and the latter needed a shootout to put paid finally to Midtjylland.

Any feelgood factor from those results, and from Spurs’ creditable draw at Anfield last Sunday, would be wiped out by defeat, regardless of how West Ham were faring at Aston Villa,Rob Smyth will have live updates, before reports, reaction and analysis from Ben Fisher and Jonathan Wilson,Only one side are still chasing a clean sweep, after Real Madrid once again got the better of Pep Guardiola in the Champions League, but has there ever been a higher stakes League Cup final? It’s the quadruple hunters of Arsenal up against the treble chasers of Manchester City, with apprentice Mikel Arteta in one dugout against master Guardiola in the other, first in the Premier League against second,The only League Cup final we can find between the two sides that finished the season first and second was 1978, when the eventual champions, Nottingham Forest, beat the eventual runners-up, Liverpool, in a replay,To borrow a phrase popularised by Phil Thompson’s reaction to that loss, Daniel Harris will be first with news of who finishes the game sick as a parrot, while David Hytner, Jamie Jackson and Barney Ronay are at Wembley.

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Reform UK suspends Scottish candidate less than a day after announcing him

Reform UK has suspended one of its Scottish candidates after it emerged he had been struck off as a company director, and the party faces growing attacks for fielding candidates making Islamophobic remarks.Reform confirmed on Friday morning it had suspended Stuart Niven, its candidate for Dundee City West, after the Herald revealed he had been struck off after diverting tens of thousands of pounds of Covid grants into his personal account.Several hours after that admission, claims within Reform’s Scottish manifesto that it could save billions of pounds in Holyrood spending were dismissed by the Institute for Fiscal Studies thinktank, which described many of its pledges as “not fiscally credible” and “unserious at best”.Reform had faced a succession of attacks from across the political spectrum about the conduct of several candidates only hours after Nigel Farage unveiled the 73 Reform UK hopefuls standing for May’s Scottish parliament election.Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, said the disclosures in several newspapers about their “divisive tweets” raised challenging questions about the party’s screening process, which Farage earlier this year claimed was now far more rigorous than before

about 8 hours ago
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Starmer’s ministers look at new economic blueprint to quell voter anger

Cabinet ministers have been studying a blueprint for Labour to radically overhaul its economic offer and messaging, including devolving tax powers, abolishing national insurance, and major property tax changes.Passed around dozens of MPs, the paper argues that without a major rethink, the failure to tackle the discontent on the cost of living will hand the next election to a hard-right government. There is also increasing concern that the war with Iran – pushing up prices of fuel, energy, food and mortgages – will fuel further mass public anger.The report, which has the draft title of the Beveridge Report for the Economy, will say the British economy rewards grifters and exploitation rather than hard work, and that voter anger is fuelled by the belief that hard work and “doing the right thing” leaves many feeling cheated.Several potential Labour leadership candidates are understood to have requested to see the report, which was prepared as part of a partnership between the Labour Growth Group of MPs once considered loyal to Keir Starmer and the Good Growth Foundation thinktank

about 9 hours ago
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Attorney general asks if Kemi Badenoch would object to Jewish public prayer

Richard Hermer, the attorney general, has challenged Kemi Badenoch to say whether she would object to Jewish prayer in public, after the Conservative leader backed one of her shadow ministers who said an Islamic prayer event was intimidating and un-British.Hermer, one of the UK’s most prominent Jewish politicians, said Badenoch’s decision to support the views of Nick Timothy, the shadow justice secretary, put her on a par with Reform UK and Tommy Robinson, the far-right activist.After an event to mark Ramadan took place on Monday evening in London’s Trafalgar Square, Timothy posted images of mass prayers taking place, saying such an action in a public space was “an act of domination” and “straight from the Islamist playbook”.Asked about her support for Timothy on Thursday, Badenoch said any public expressions of religion should “fit within the norms of a British culture”, and criticised the way men and women were separated for the Ramadan prayers, with men nearer the stage and women farther behind.Hermer told the Guardian Badenoch needed to clarify her view

about 15 hours ago
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Nigel Farage condemned over call to ban public prayer for Muslims in the UK

Muslim leaders have condemned Nigel Farage’s call to ban public prayer by Muslims in the UK as bigoted and warned of a “growing tide of hate” after the Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, questioned whether the events fitted “within the norms of British culture”.Farage was speaking at the launch of Reform UK’s manifesto for the forthcoming Scottish parliament elections when he made the remarks.He described as “a wake up call and a warning to everybody” an event in Trafalgar Square earlier this week where hundreds of Muslims and people of other faiths prayed together, before the celebration of Eid.He said the event, organised by the Ramadan Tent Project and attended by Sadiq Khan, London’s mayor, was “an open, deliberate, wilful attempt, not at the private observance of a different religion, but the attempt to overtake, intimidate and dominate our way of life”.The event has happened in the historic square in central London five times before without incident or previous controversy

1 day ago
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Here’s what a reformed House of Lords could look like | Letters

A reformed Lords could give us the best of all worlds: a chamber that connects and legitimises the disparate parts of our higgledy-piggledy devolved constitution without challenging the primacy of the directly elected Commons (So long, hereditary peers – but the Lords is still full of absurd anachronisms, 13 March).Three-quarters of its members could be indirectly elected by local councillors, with temporary seats reserved for the heads of the national governments and regional mayors. Party leaders not yet in the Commons – such as Zack Polanski – could also sit there. The remaining seats could be time‑limited appointments for experts such as retired civil servants and former ministers, perhaps with different voting rights. An independent commission could oversee appointments, vet eligibility and weed out dodgy donors

1 day ago
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Harry Barnes obituary

It was probably inevitable that the former Labour MP Harry Barnes, who has died aged 89 of cancer, would have very well delineated political views when he arrived in the House of Commons. He was already middle-aged, and had spent much of the previous three decades studying politics, first as a mature student and then working as an extramural lecturer on the subject, teaching others who were likewise seeking a second chance at education later in life.Barnes, who represented North East Derbyshire from 1987 until 2005, was a serious politician, a man of principle and conviction, but also someone who recognised the need for political flexibility in evolving circumstances.He was never constrained by ideology and was constantly in pursuit of what could be a possible new route to resolve existing problems, notably in Ireland. Always on the left of the Labour party, he was a serial rebel against his own frontbench, while simultaneously writing polite notes to the chief whip to explain his latest defiance

1 day ago
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‘Huge build-up of risk’: London’s centuries-old shipping industry wrestles with Iran war

about 9 hours ago
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JP Morgan Chase to use computer estimates to monitor hours worked by junior bankers

about 12 hours ago
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Marmite maker Unilever in talks to merge food business with US-based McCormick

about 12 hours ago
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Work from home and slow down on the road: world’s energy watchdog advises emergency measures as oil prices rise

about 16 hours ago
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High charges, poor service: NCP hits the skids as drivers change habits

about 16 hours ago
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Shrinkflation takes a bite out of Easter eggs as shoppers pay more for less

about 22 hours ago