England expect Ecclestone to play through pain in Cricket World Cup semi-final


Reform wheels out Danny Kruger, the ‘brains’ of Nigel Farage’s operation | John Crace
Nigel Farage too Marmite for you? Lee Anderson too Lee Andersony? Richard Tice too smooth? Sarah Pochin a bit too racisty? Don’t worry. These things happen. But all will be well, because Reform have just the MP for you. Someone who can be passed off as a safeish pair of hands. Someone who won’t frighten the horses

John Major tells Tories alliance with Reform would be ‘beyond stupid’
John Major has told the Conservatives that forming an alliance with Reform UK would “for ever destroy” the party, which he said had already left traditional supporters “politically homeless” by lurching too far to the right.The former prime minister dismissed a pact with Nigel Farage’s party as “beyond stupid”, saying that any Tories tempted to defect to Reform should go now because his own party would be better off without them.As the Tories struggle with the existential threat posed by Reform’s surge in popularity, Major warned far more than the future of the party was at stake with autocracies on the march across the world.“Frustration with democracy should not blind us to the toxic nature of nationalism, or any and every form of populist or authoritarian government,” he said.Addressing a Conservative party lunch on Tuesday, he urged the party not to reject the centre ground of British politics, saying they were “seriously alienating” voters by coming down on the wrong side of public opinion on Europe, climate change and overseas aid

Reform UK would seize control of civil servants just like Trump in US, says Kruger – as it happened
Donald Trump’s first term in office was widely seen as chaotic. He did not expect to win, and his administration did not seem to have much of a clue as to what it wanted to achieve. His second administration is also chaotic, but it is effective and purposeful in away that the first one wasn’t (which is largely why authoritarianism is being enforced so rapidly). This time Trump seems to know what to do with the levers in power, and that is partly because his allies worked up detailed plans for government ahead of 2020 presidential election, even publishing a 900-page manifesto, Project 2025. (During the campaign, when its extreme proposals started getting negative attention, Trump falsely claimed he had nothing to do with it

Letter: Sir Robert Worcester obituary
Though Mori, the firm run by Bob Worcester was replaced as Labour’s pollster by the Shadow Communications Agency under Philip Gould in the late 1980s, Bob continued to be a friend. On the Saturday after our election defeat in 1992, giving John Major a majority of 21, he called me to offer commiserations and to say that he wanted to tell me about “the size of Labour’s defeat”. I responded irately that: “The number 21 is tattooed on the inside of my bloody eyelids!”Calmly, he said, “but you should be aware that the bottom 11 Tory constituency majorities totalled 1,240 votes. That was your losing margin.” Obviously, that didn’t ease my sense of defeat, but then he added: “There’s a difference between being beaten badly and being beaten narrowly

Reform UK would let ministers ignore international law, Kruger says
Reform UK would allow ministers to ignore international law and give them the ability to fire civil servants in a Donald Trump-style overhaul of government powers, the party’s new efficiency tsar has said.Danny Kruger, who defected to Reform from the Conservatives last month, set out the party’s plans to change the way the government and civil service operate, handing more power to the cabinet.The party’s department of government efficiency (Doge) chief said he would want to rewrite the ministerial code and the civil service code to free the government from current constraints.“There is a glaring objection that I have to the ministerial code … which is that it requires them to acknowledge international law in their decision-making. That is an immediate change we would make,” Kruger said

Jeremy Corbyn to appear in north London panto
He has spent a whole career dealing with booing and hissing in the House of Commons. But now in the run-up to Christmas, the former Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn will bring that experience to bear as he appears in pantomime at a north London theatre.The Islington North MP, who sits as an independent, will perform as the “Wizard of Oz-lington” in a drag production of Wicked Witches. The venue said he would make an onscreen cameo.“The Pleasance [theatre] has been at the heart of our community for 30 years, and local theatre like this deserves our support,” Corbyn said

Inflation jumps to 3.2%, dashing hopes of a Melbourne Cup day rate cut for homeowners

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Ben & Jerry’s owner stopped brand developing flavour for peace in Gaza

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HSBC warns it could take years to settle Madoff case as bank takes $1.1bn hit