Tim Cook takes victory lap as Apple’s financial results soar past Wall Street expectations


Labour calls on Jenrick to give £37,500 campaign donation to charity amid electoral law investigation
Labour has called on Robert Jenrick to give up almost £40,000 donated to his campaign to be Conservative leader in 2024 following allegations that the sum came from an impermissible foreign donor now convicted of fraud.The party called for Jenrick to make a donation to charity after the Guardian revealed the Electoral Commission has been investigating claims that £37,500 out of £100,000 given to his campaign by a UK company Spott Fitness ultimately came from a company run by a US-based businessman, Gary Klopfenstein.The watchdog has also referred evidence to the police to assess whether any electoral laws have been broken. Its inquiries are now paused while the police review the material. The exact scope of the review is unclear and the police have not confirmed whether it relates to any specific individual

Could Lib Dems become the biggest party in English local government?
It has been an election buildup dominated by the rise of Reform UK and the Greens, and the contrasting woes of Labour and the Tories. But there is a chance that on 8 May the Liberal Democrats, largely ignored in recent weeks, could wake up as the biggest party in English local government.This is just one of several paradoxes for the party’s leader, Ed Davey, and his team. They are fifth in many national polls, with a rating barely changed from 2024. But Lib Dem bosses are sanguine, convinced that UK politics is now so different, so atomised, to make headline polling almost irrelevant

Mapped: the elections that could deliver ‘unprecedented’ losses for Labour
Labour is on track for its worst local election performance next Thursday, data analysed by the Guardian shows, in a blow that will pile further pressure on Keir Starmer’s leadership.Barring a drastic change in fortunes, Labour’s vote-share could fall to historic lows across elections for councils in England and devolved parliaments in Wales and Scotland on 7 May, with big gains for Reform, the Greens and nationalist parties, according to recent polling.The collapse in support is particularly existential in the race for the Welsh parliament, the Senedd, which Labour has dominated since its creation in 1999.Polling shows Labour’s vote share falling by more than half in Wales, enough to push the party into third place, with Reform and Plaid Cymru vying for first.Labour’s long-term decline in Scotland is expected to continue, with the Scottish National party likely to remain in power in Holyrood and Reform headed for second place

Could Starmer bring back Rayner to steady ship – and would she get onboard?
It is nearly eight months since Angela Rayner quit the cabinet because of her tax arrangements, but some might argue her influence on the government has not gone away. And soon she might return, whether as Keir Starmer’s saviour or, perhaps, his usurper.There is increasing speculation that the prime minister could carry out a small-scale reshuffle, primarily to bring back Rayner, his former deputy and one of Labour’s political heavyweights.This is by no means certain: Starmer is understood to have not yet made up his mind, and events depend in part on how significant a blow Labour is dealt in next week’s elections to the Scottish and Welsh parliaments and to councils across England.Robert Hayward, the elections analyst and Conservative peer, has predicted Labour will lose 1,850 council seats on 7 May, above the 1,500 figure cited in one report as the possible trigger for a cabinet revolt

‘Reform is an acute threat to Scottish self-government,’ says John Swinney
Reform UK represents an acute threat to Scottish self government, John Swinney has warned, adding that nationalist victories in Scotland and Wales in May could “irrevocably change” the dynamics of constitutional debate across the UK.While the Scottish National party enjoys a comfortable polling lead ahead of the Holyrood elections next Thursday, recent polling has put Reform, led in Scotland by the millionaire and former Conservative peer Malcolm Offord, neck and neck with Scottish Labour for second place.Cruising towards an unprecedented fifth term, Swinney comes across as genuinely relaxed, as the SNP benefits from the fracturing of the pro-union vote offsetting lower approval rating for his government. Arguably the greatest threat all parties face is turnout, after a lacklustre campaign mirroring voter disengagement and an unusually high level of undecideds.Speaking to the Guardian, Swinney said: “The advent of Reform will bring in a sizeable number of [members of the Scottish parliament] who want to get rid of the place

Senior UK ministers deride Rachel Reeves’s reported plan of year-long rent freeze
Senior ministers have poured scorn on the idea of freezing private sector rents for a year, less than 48 hours after the Guardian revealed Rachel Reeves was considering it.Steve Reed, the housing secretary, and Matthew Pennycook, the housing minister, became the latest government figures to criticise the idea, which has since been ruled out by No 10.The government’s split over the idea has fed speculation about Reeves’ job after reports over the weekend that Keir Starmer was intending to sack her after the local elections.Keir Starmer failed to guarantee she would remain in place during Wednesday’s Prime Minister’s Questions, though Downing Street insists she retains the prime minister’s support.Pennycook said on Wednesday about the rent freeze: “We are not doing this

Calls grow to ban Palantir in Australia after manifesto described by UK MP as ‘ramblings of a supervillain’

Galaxy S26 review: Samsung’s still-compact flagship Android

‘Your questions are designed to trick me’: combative Musk grilled over battle with Sam Altman

Maryland becomes first state to ban surveillance pricing in grocery stores

Tech giants’ results show rosy outlook for AI boom and US stock market

Claude-powered AI agent’s confession after deleting a firm’s entire database: ‘I violated every principle I was given’