‘My DNA is in this car’: Lewis Hamilton revved up for Ferrari in new F1 season

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Lewis Hamilton believes he is in the “best place” he has been at Ferrari, with a new car that carries his “DNA”,The seven-time champion failed to take a podium place for the first time and finished sixth in the drivers’ championship, behind his teammate Charles Leclerc in fifth in his debut season,By the end, he was clearly disenchanted, describing his first year at Ferrari as a “nightmare”,The Scuderia have looked promising in pre-season, and in Bahrain at the third and final test Hamilton, who has regrouped over the winter, presented a buoyant figure, optimistic about the forthcoming challenge,“I’ve gone through quite a bit and left everything, all of last year, behind me,” he said.

“I spent a lot of time rebuilding over this winter, refocusing, really getting my body and my mind to a much better place.I generally feel personally in the best place that I’ve been in a long time with rearranging things within my team.”Hamilton joined Ferrari at the end of a stable period of regulations and with the car already designed but this season, having been in place with the team, he has had the chance to help shape the new model.“Last year we were locked into a car that ultimately I inherited,” he said.“This is a car that I’ve been able to be a part of developing on the simulator for the last 10 months, eight months and so like a bit of my DNA is within it, so I’m more connected to this one for sure.

”The British driver was also clear that, despite the travails of 2025, he was committed to a long‑term project at Ferrari.“My belief in the team is still absolutely the same.I understand the faith in this team and what they’re capable of and that’s why I joined the team.“I knew it wasn’t going to be an overnight thing where we’d have success immediately, that’s why I signed a longer deal, because I knew it was a process and I feel like we’ve also learned a huge amount from last year as a team.”The FIA, the sport’s governing body, will attempt to end the row over Mercedes’s controversial use of a loophole in the regulations involving the compression ratio of their engine.

It is believed Mercedes have stolen a march on their rivals by exploiting a higher ratio than the 16:1 mandated when the engine is running because it is measured when “cold”, or at ambient temperatures.The other engine manufacturers have been aggrieved at what they see as an unfair advantage, if one that is still within the letter of the regulations.After a meeting of the power unit advisory committee, the FIA has allowed a proposal that as of 1 August – after 13 of the season’s 24 races – the rules would be changed so that the compression ratio would also be measured at a representative operating temperature of 130°C.The vote on the proposal will be decided in the next 10 days and requires a super-majority of five of the seven on the committee, which consists of the FIA, F1 and the five manufacturers, Mercedes, Ferrari, Red Bull, Audi and Honda.George Russell topped the timesheets for Mercedes on the firstday of the final test, from McLaren’s Oscar Piastri and Ferrari’s Leclerc.

The session concluded with a test of a new starting procedure the FIA is evaluating because of concerns that cars at the back of the grid would not have time to reach the necessary revs to bring the turbo up to speed before the lights go out.An additional hold of five seconds was trialled before the usual start sequence began and all the cars did get off the line successfully.
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Labour insiders fear ‘annihilation’ in Lancashire local elections after U-turn

Labour figures in the county with the highest number of reinstated council elections, following the government’s recent U-turn, have said they fear the party will be “annihilated” when voters go to the polls in May.The polls had expected to be postponed pending a reorganisation of local government in the county and a move to unitary authorities, but earlier this week the local government secretary, Steve Reed, scrapped plans to delay the elections, after Reform UK threatened a legal challenge.Two councils, Blackburn with Darwen and Blackpool, are already unitary authorities, while the other 12 districts are two-tier and sit under Lancashire county council.With the government’s U-turn, seven councils will now have elections in May they had not expected; Burnley, Blackburn, Hyndburn, Pendle, Chorley, West Lancashire and Preston – an area with nearly 790,000 people – meaning the county will have more unexpected elections than any other. A total of 30 local authorities will now hold elections in May when they had not expected to, with almost a quarter of those in Lancashire

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Reform UK would restore two-child benefit cap, Jenrick says in policy U-turn

Reform UK would restore the two-child benefit cap in full, Robert Jenrick has announced, in a major U-turn for the party that critics said would plunge hundreds of thousands of children into poverty.In his first speech as Reform’s Treasury spokesperson, Jenrick said the party had changed tack since Nigel Farage last year said he would scrap the two-child limit and suggested his party wanted to go “much further to encourage people to have children”.As part of a full-frontal attack on benefits, Jenrick also said the Motability scheme, which enables disabled people to lease a new car, scooter or powered wheelchair to help them be independent, would be reformed to “end abuse” where “expensive cars are handed out for conditions like tennis elbow and paid for by working people who can’t afford those cars themselves”.Jenrick also said only British nationals would be able to claim benefits under a Reform UK government, and people claiming benefits for “mild anxiety, depression, and similar conditions” would be stopped. Those with mental health issues would have to have a clinical diagnosis “to weed out those who are choosing a life on benefits”

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Boss of BAE Systems urges ministers to publish delayed military spending plan

The boss of Britain’s biggest defence company has urged ministers to publish a long-delayed blueprint for military spending as soon as possible, as it posted record sales driven by a global increase in demand after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.Charles Woodburn, the chief executive of BAE Systems, said companies want clarity on how the money would be spent, adding that the defence investment plan (DIP) – due in late 2025 – was holding back investment.“We were expecting it before the end of last year and from an industry perspective we’re all keen to crack on,” he said on Wednesday. “The sooner the better as far as we’re concerned.“Earlier clarity means that industry can make plans and invest, deploy our strong balance sheets … so looking for clarity is important for business

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Nigel Farage unveils Reform UK frontbench team and warns over dissent

Nigel Farage has unveiled the first part of Reform UK’s frontbench team, saying it shows that the party is no longer reliant entirely on him – while also warning that he will not tolerate any dissent from his colleagues.Two of the four appointees are recent defectors from the Conservatives: Robert Jenrick, who takes on the Treasury brief, and Suella Braverman, whom Farage has put in charge of education, skills and equalities.Richard Tice, Reform’s deputy leader, who before Jenrick’s arrival had been expected to have the Treasury role, has instead been handed a combined brief of business, trade and energy. Zia Yusuf, the party’s head of policy and the only one of the quartet not in parliament, has been given the home affairs and migration brief.Farage said the emergence of this team, with more posts to be announced soon, should end criticism that he runs a “one-man band”

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What made ministers think they could delay local elections in England?

Ministers have abandoned their proposals to delay local elections in 30 English councils after finding they were likely to lose a legal case on the issue. Announced on Monday, the U-turn was made by the housing minister, Matthew Pennycook, after his boss, the housing secretary, Steve Reed, recused himself from the decision. The chain of events has raised several questions about government decision-making that officials are refusing to answer.Ministers have postponed local elections before. Last year Angela Rayner, as local government secretary, announced that elections for nine councils would be delayed to allow them to carry out a major reorganisation

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Norfolk council leader pulls out of long-awaited devolution deal over election U-turn

A Norfolk council leader has accused the government of “bullying” her local authority into postponing elections in return for extra funding and powers, as she pulled out of long-awaited devolution deal for the county.Kay Mason Billig, the Conservative leader of Norfolk county council, said she would no longer take part in local government reorganisation (LGR) or devolution plans in the area, saying the council could not participate in that and simultaneously hold elections.Her announcement came after the government scrapped plans to postpone local elections at 30 councils in England undergoing reorganisation, in the face of a legal challenge from Reform UK.There are concerns the election U-turn, which will see officials scrambling to organise ballots in time for polling day in May, could throw plans for the biggest council shake-up in 50 years into disarray.“Words fail me for describing the mess the government have created with their election hokey cokey,” Billig said