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The Your Party committee election was chaos. Why break the habit of a lifetime? | John Crace

Start as you mean to go on. Your Party has had a fair few ups and downs in its short lifespan. Some might call it chaos. Its two most prominent members, Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana, seem barely able to stand being in the same room as each other. Allegations of financial misconduct over membership fees and donations

about 9 hours ago
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Labour, Green party and Reform make final pitch to voters in Gorton and Denton – as it happened

Grassroots Left, the Your Party faction supporting Zara Sultana, has issued a statement following the leadership team elections won by the rival The Many slate, which backs Jeremy Corbyn. It says:double quotation markOur party is strongest when members have real power: over policy, finances, selections, and decision-making – through transparent, accountable structures. All Grassroots Left members will push for this on the CEC. We will push to make sure the branches are recognised immediately, fully supported and that members are put at the heart of the party.Your Party must now work together to become a party of and for the whole left – with no more witch-hunts or stitch-ups

about 9 hours ago
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Your Party under Corbyn to work with Greens on ‘coordinated left-flank offensive’

A Jeremy Corbyn-led Your Party will work with the Green party and others to push for a “coordinated left-flank offensive” against Reform and Labour, the Guardian understands.After winning a comprehensive victory to become the de facto leader of the leftwing startup party on Thursday, Corbyn will seek to rebuild bridges with pro-Gaza communities “alienated” by his rival Zarah Sultana, sources close to Corbyn said.Corbyn will become Your Party’s parliamentary leader, after an election in which Sultana was also voted on to the party’s leadership committee under its collective leadership model. Corbyn-backed candidates took 14 of the 24 available places on the party’s central executive committee (CEC). Sultana-backed candidates took seven of the seats and three went to independents

about 9 hours ago
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British-Danish couple say new UK passport rules may separate them from children

A British man and a Danish woman fear they will be separated from their young children in Copenhagen airport because of new border control rules on British dual nationals.James Scrivens and his wife, Sara, who live in Wales, were visiting relatives in Norway and Denmark during the school holidays, and learned about the new Home Office rules only while they were abroad.Under the rules, dual nationals risk being denied boarding if they do not present a British passport, current or expired, or a “certificate of entitlement”, costing £589, attached to the passport of their second nationality, to prove their right to enter the UK.On Thursday the migration minister Mike Tapp dismissed as “absurd” claims that the government had failed to properly communicate the new rules.Scrivens is hoping the airline will show clemency when they turn up in Copenhagen on Friday, but says if they don’t, their children may have to stay with their grandparents while at least one parent returns home to apply for their first British passports

about 11 hours ago
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Sarwar gambles on break with Starmer as Labour support slumps

“People look at Holyrood and think: ‘Lets give them all a bloody nose’,” says Alex, a betting shop manager. Speaking in a focus group of people who voted Labour at the 2024 general election, Alex captured the downbeat mood of a cohort bitterly disappointed with the Labour government’s early performance, frustrated by the record of the Scottish National party and wearied by what they described as “scandal after scandal” polluting public life.Organised by the public opinion researchers More in Common, the discussion took place last week in Glasgow’s southside, where the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar, grew up and still lives with his family.With two months to go until the Scottish parliament elections, these are the voters Sarwar believes he can re-energise. Their dissatisfaction with Westminster lay behind his calculated decision a fortnight ago to call for Keir Starmer to stand aside, as polls consistently show Scottish Labour, a once buoyant party, trailing in third place behind John Swinney’s SNP and Reform UK

about 16 hours ago
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Home Office denies ‘absurd’ criticism over rule change that may leave dual nationals stranded

The Home Office has dismissed as “absurd” claims that it failed to properly communicate new border rules that left some British dual nationals at risk of being prevented from boarding flights to the UK.During a heated session in parliament on Wednesday, the Home Office minister Mike Tapp suggested that media coverage in the Guardian and BBC reflected the department’s efforts to publicise the changes.The Labour backbencher Kerry McCarthy described how two of her constituents feared being stranded on their honeymoon because of the new requirements, which came into force on Wednesday.Under the changes, British dual nationals must present a valid or expired British passport, or a £589 certificate of entitlement, to prove their right of abode before boarding a plane, ferry or train to the UK.“They don’t know if they can actually get back into the UK from [their] honeymoon,” McCarthy said

about 17 hours ago
sportSee all
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The Indiana Bears? Why an interstate move for a cherished NFL team may work out

about 14 hours ago
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Norway’s all-conquering Winter Olympians have a message for us all – and it’s not what you think | Cath Bishop

about 18 hours ago
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US hockey star Hilary Knight responds to Trump’s ‘distasteful joke’ about women’s team

1 day ago
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Saracens’ salary cap penalty under scrutiny over conflict of interest claims

1 day ago
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English cricket’s hunger for Indian money has led it into a moral and legal minefield | Barney Ronay

1 day ago
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Steve Borthwick turns to 2003 World Cup heroes for Six Nations inspiration

1 day ago

Norway’s all-conquering Winter Olympians have a message for us all – and it’s not what you think | Cath Bishop

about 18 hours ago
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Norway’s Olympians stormed the mountains of Milano Cortina and left the rest of the world wondering how a nation of 5,6 million people regularly tops the Winter Olympics medal table, this year winning 18 gold medals and 41 medals overall,They’re not bad at the Summer Olympics either, despite not playing to their obvious national geographical strengths, winning four gold medals and a total of eight medals in Paris 2024,But all this talk of medals detracts from looking more closely at what the Norwegians do to create one of the best and most sustainable sports systems in the world,Reports have highlighted that there is no competitive sport in Norway for youngsters before the age of 12.

Now think of all of Britain’s early talent-identification schemes, endless mini-leagues and ubiquitous “pathways”.Consider all those extra practices to secure the next trophy, anxous discussions about rankings, disappointment over selection decisions and the “devastating losses” on a weekend that should just be another ordinary yet fun day in a child’s life.Remember also the army of volunteers required to adjudicate, select and keep score in sport, rather than support, encourage and spread joy.Norway has a national youth sports strategy based on the vision of “Joy of Sport for All”.There isn’t one here in the UK.

There is a national sports strategy with the strapline “Get Active”, which feels more of a reprimand than an inspiring vision,While it’s true that sport and physical activity are mentioned in the new National Youth Strategy, it’s so buried within the generic text that I couldn’t find or feel the joy of sport coming through at all,Let’s just dream for a moment,What if every youth coach, sports club volunteer, club leader – and let’s add in PE teachers too – had one overarching goal in their role description and annual aims? It could be a single principle underlying why they turn up each week, underpinning every conversation with a child entrusted to them: to create an experience of joy,What might be different? What might we gain or lose? What assumptions would that challenge?It’s not that coaches and clubs don’t want to create joyous experiences, it’s just that there seem to be other priorities.

The simplicity and clarity of the Norwegian youth sport system liberates them from archaic tropes that still seem prevalent in our system.The Norwegians even feel comfortable -– trigger warning – giving trophies out to every kid! That’s an idea I’ve only seen ridiculed in the UK, dismissed as “not real life”, soft, embarrassing, pathetic.It’s usually cited as the ultimate vindication for competitive sport, ironically.Any slight shift towards sports festivals and greater enjoyment is undermined by a searing: “You’ll be suggesting everyone gets a trophy next.” Except, yes.

That is what the mighty, heroic, mountain-conquering Norwegians do.They both happily give all children trophies as they grow up and at the same time deliver indomitable Olympic performances like we saw before us on the Livigno mountains.What the Norwegians know – and we either miss or consider optional – is that the most important thing is that children enjoy sport and come back again and again.Norway plays the long game, proving that it isn’t essential to learn from the age of five that “sport is tough, to succeed you have to suffer”.In so doing they demonstrate that truly resilient adults, including elite athletes, are best forged from a childhood full of thriving experiences of sport.

Johannes Høsflot Klæbo won six gold medals at Milano Cortina and now has 11 golds in all, but only started in the performance system at 15 having enjoyed a range of sports growing up.In the UK we give out godlike status for less than half as many gold medals – you really wonder if we are going soft …Norwegian children are not pressured into specialising too young: early bloomers are not favoured over others who blossom later, and the system invests consistently to ensure access to all.Schools have winter ski days and families ski together on the weekends.They avoid the damaging separation of children into those with “talent” and those traumatised by dropping the ball and being left out of teams.UK reports show fewer than half of all children get a basic amount of daily exercise with rapidly increasing drop-out rates before reaching adulthood.

In Norway, 90% of young children are active, and though it decreases, it’s still more than 70% for teenagers.Tore Øvrebø, Norway’s much-interviewed director of elite sport, questions why other sporting systems focus more on getting rid of young people than developing them.“The biggest motivation for kids to do sports is that they do it with their friends and they have fun,” he says.Research in the UK shows that the biggest reason why kids drop out is it stops being fun.It’s really that simple.

Back to imagining: more play and creativity, more time for developing skills and a wider range of movements and coordination, stronger team experiences and growing competence in building social connections.By being less competitive, something we seem almost afraid of considering, Norwegian children learn about sport much more effectively.That’s what we might describe as the paradox of the Norwegian approach, although to them, it’s just common sense.A Norwegian friend now living in London – naturally just back from a few days cross-country skiing – told me the press were going wild about all the medals back home.They both love those hard-fought medals and at the same time realise it’s a mug’s game to run youth sport like that.

Our pyramids and pathways mislead us.We have driven a deep divide between the ideas of sport for fun and “serious competitive sport” as if it’s an essential life truth.Every coach and sports leader should see it as their personal duty to undo this fiction.We need to design a national youth sports strategy around human flourishing, not suffering.Coaching courses should help coaches figure out what’s required for children to want to come back and play sport throughout their childhood and adult lives.

It’s the ultimate win-win: if we helped every child to love sport, we would get both better athletes and healthier humans,Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here,