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England look to crowd to spur them to final-day Test win against India

about 18 hours ago
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England have called on a sell-out day-five crowd to roar them to victory at Lord’s after a raucous atmosphere towards the end of Sunday spurred them to take four India wickets and set up a cliffhanger conclusion to the third Test.England were bowled out for 192 to leave India chasing 193 and England 10 wickets to take a 2-1 lead in the series.Though the first-innings centurion KL Rahul was unbeaten on 33 at the close, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Karun Nair and Shubman Gill were all dismissed cheaply before Ben Stokes uprooted the off stump of Akash Deep, the nightwatcher, with the final ball of the day to leave the tourists 58 for four overnight.“The buzz around the ground really gave the boys the lift they needed,” said Marcus Trescothick, the team’s assistant coach.“And a couple of late wickets gave them that hope that we’re bang on the money.

So it will revolve around the first hour of the day, how positive India can be, how dominant we can be with the ball, and how many early wickets we can get.“If we can create some form of atmosphere that’s very similar to that – it may not start the same way, it might take a wicket to get it going, we might need Joe [Root] to wind them up again.But the support has been brilliant throughout, both teams are really well supported, and it’s great that we have that.”At times the rancour seen towards the close on Saturday spilled out again, with Mohammed Siraj aggressively celebrating the early dismissal of Ben Duckett, and India borrowing some of the delaying tactics previously deployed by Zak Crawley as they sought to limit the number of overs bowled before stumps.This undercurrent of aggression seems to be supercharging the motivation of both teams.

“It definitely helps in this situation, having that competitive edge from both teams where they’re desperate to win,” Trescothick said,“I have no problem at all with what goes on,There was a bit on [Saturday] night, there was a similar situation tonight,Of course both teams know there’s always lines you can’t cross, but I don’t think it’s really been troubled too much in this game and it definitely helps the atmosphere,”Washington Sundar, who took four wickets in an innings for the first time in a Test outside India, said his side were “sitting pretty” and that he was “looking forward to tomorrow in every way”, with the release of their more competitive spirits helping his teammates to thriveSign up to The SpinSubscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week’s actionafter newsletter promotion“I would say the aggression is always inside of us, in both dressing rooms,” he said.

“There was an incident that happened and it sort of came out last evening, and it did come out quite a bit today as well.So it’s all the more interesting for all of us.It’s sport and everyone is quite aggressive and quite intense in their own ways – no matter the sport if you’re an athlete it’s a common fact, it’s always inside of an individual.”
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UK government announces £63m funding for EV charging infrastructure

The transport secretary has promised to make it “easier and cheaper” to buy electric cars, as the government announces £63m worth of funding to help build charging infrastructure.Heidi Alexander said on Sunday she wanted to make it more affordable to switch to electric vehicles as she announced new money for councils and other bodies to spend on facilities to charge cars.She announced £63m worth of funding for EV charging, with officials also finalising plans for a £700m package of subsidies to bring down the cost of buying a new electric car.The money still falls short of the £950m pledged by the Conservatives for motorway charging points, however, which the Labour government scrapped last month, accusing the previous government of having failed to set aside funding for it.UK-made EVs are expected to receive the most generous subsidies under the scheme, which would probably benefit the Japanese carmaker Nissan, which is gearing up to produce a new version of its Leaf electric car in Sunderland

1 day ago
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Why Labour should target happiness alongside economic growth | Heather Stewart

Every parent who battled their way through home schooling during the long months of lockdown, and every vulnerable person forced to shield themselves away, can have had little doubt that the Covid pandemic was an unhappy time.But research by the non-profit consultancy Pro Bono Economics (PBE), suggests that the nation’s wellbeing has never fully recovered from the plunge it took in mid-2020.Happiness – or wellbeing, or life satisfaction – seems a slippery concept to measure, but economists have been studying and tracking how the public are feeling about their lives for decades.In the UK, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has done this since 2011 by asking four questions, including: “Overall, how satisfied are you with your life?” and: “Overall, how anxious did you feel yesterday?”As the first lockdown took hold, the anxiety measure spiked, not surprisingly, while the other three, which track respondents’ satisfaction, happiness and sense of purpose, all had marked declines.Given the shadow the pandemic cast over so many people’s lives, it feels intuitively right that on none of these four metrics has wellbeing in the UK returned to the pre-Covid equilibrium

1 day ago
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Most people in France, Germany, Italy and Spain would support UK rejoining EU, poll finds

A decade after MPs voted to hold the referendum that led to Britain leaving the European Union, a poll has found majorities in the bloc’s four largest member states would support the UK rejoining – but not on the same terms it had before.The YouGov survey of six western European countries, including the UK, also confirms that a clear majority of British voters now back the country rejoining the bloc – but only if it can keep the opt-outs it previously enjoyed.The result, the pollster said, was a “public opinion impasse”, even if there seems precious little likelihood, for the time being, of the UK’s Labour government, which this year negotiated a “reset” with the bloc, attempting a return to the EU.YouGov’s EuroTrack survey showed that at least half of people asked across the four largest EU nations – France, Germany, Italy and Spain – supported the UK being allowed to rejoin, with percentages ranging from 51% in Italy to 53% in France, 60% in Spain and 63% in Germany.Asked whether Britain should be allowed back in on the conditions it enjoyed when it left, however, including not having to adopt the euro currency and remaining outside the Schengen passport-free zone, the numbers changed significantly

1 day ago
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Reform wants to cut council diversity roles. The problem is there are already barely any

Councils run by Reform UK have an average of fewer than 0.5 diversity and equality roles each, it has emerged, calling into question the party’s stated aim to save significant sums of money by cutting such jobs.According to freedom of information requests, across the 10 Reform-run English councils there was a combined 4.56 full-time equivalent (FTE) jobs connected to equality and diversity, not including roles required by law such as those for inclusion in education, including for pupils with disabilities.Even using an assumed average full-time salary of £50,000, cutting all the roles would save the Reform-run councils slightly less than 0

1 day ago
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Unite attacks Angela Rayner over ‘abhorrent’ handling of Birmingham bin strikes

Angela Rayner has been accused of handling the Birmingham bin workers’ strike in a “totally and utterly abhorrent” way by the Unite general secretary, Sharon Graham.Graham told BBC Radio 4 Today’s programme: “Angela Rayner refuses to get involved, and she is directly aiding and abetting the fire-and-rehire of these bin workers, it is totally and utterly abhorrent.”In a heated interview, Graham said the deputy prime minister had also failed to turn up to a recent meeting with Graham at an event, saying: “She doesn’t want to talk about this issue, because she knows that what is happening is abhorrent, but she does not want to intervene.”A party source told the Guardian that Rayner had to attend an urgent statement in the house led by the prime minister instead of going to the event and described Graham’s claims as “baseless”.Graham added that Rayner had been a member of the union for 10 years but may have left of her own accord over the last quarter because “she’s seen the mood music”

2 days ago
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Starmer and Reeves promised honesty about public finances. Can they stay the course?

During the first televised debate in the run-up to last summer’s general election, Keir Starmer used a phrase that received enthusiastic – and unanticipated – applause from the Salford audience.“I don’t pretend there’s a magic wand that will fix everything overnight,” he told them. Labour strategists were surprised by the clapping, and encouraged him to deploy the line again in future.The prime minister, his aides said, entered office determined not to fall into the same trap as many leaders before him of making promises that were never going to be kept because of the state of the public finances.For her part, Rachel Reeves arrived at the Treasury intent on hammering home the message the Tories were to blame for the sorry state of the nation’s books

2 days ago
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Ofcom head says age checks are ‘really big moment’ for children’s online safety

1 day ago
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Teach First job applicants will get in-person interviews after more apply using AI

1 day ago
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‘Workforce crisis’: key takeaways for graduates battling AI in the jobs market

1 day ago
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Louis Vuitton says UK customer data stolen in cyber-attack

3 days ago
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The CEO who never was: how Linda Yaccarino was set up to fail at Elon Musk’s X

4 days ago
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AI-generated child sexual abuse videos surging online, watchdog says

4 days ago