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Would Morgan McSweeney’s stolen phone have Mandelson messages on it?

Morgan McSweeney is not the first person to have had their phone snatched on a London street, but the fact he was at the time Keir Starmer’s chief of staff, and that his phone most likely contained messages to and from Peter Mandelson, has prompted questions. So what do we know about the circumstances surrounding the theft of McSweeney’s phone?According to McSweeney, in an account backed up by the transcript of his call to the Metropolitan police at the time, he was using his government-issued phone on a street in Pimlico, central London, just before 10.30pm on 20 October last year when a young man on a bike snatched the iPhone and pedalled off.McSweeney also had a personal phone with him, which he used to dial 999. He told the Met police handler that he had called his “office” to get the phone tracked before phoning them

about 8 hours ago
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Show of strength by Reform MPs at PMQs turns into a cameo appearance | John Crace

Much of good comedy lies in the timing. We were about halfway through Wednesday’s prime minister’s questions and Keir Starmer was answering an obviously planted question from a Labour backbencher on the government’s plans to ban political donations from overseas donors and via cryptocurrency. Having done the serious bit, Starmer couldn’t resist the opportunity to sign off with a pop at a man whose party survives on overseas donors and crypto. “There is only one party leader who has shown he will say anything, no matter how divisive, if he is paid to do so.”Without missing a beat, the speaker, Lindsay Hoyle, announced the next questioner

about 9 hours ago
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‘Doge of the left’ could save UK taxpayers up to £30bn, says new green thinktank

A “Doge of the left,” could save up to £30bn a year for taxpayers by rooting out waste, fraud and tax avoidance, according to the first report from a new green thinktank.Launched amid growing interest in the future manifesto of Zack Polanksi’s Green party, the Verdant thinktank will be co-chaired by James Meadway, a former adviser to Labour shadow chancellor John McDonnell, and civil society campaigner Deborah Doane.In its first report, the new group argues that a crackdown on waste, rather than the ideologically driven approach of Elon Musk’s former Doge – Department of Government Efficiency – in the US, could free up significant resources.“The political right have monopolised the discussion about savings in government spending, to disastrous effect,” said Meadway. “Breaking the false economies of Treasury thinking and vested Whitehall interests are an essential

about 17 hours ago
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English councils to get guidance on designing safer streets for women and girls

Councils are for the first time to receive guidance on how to create streets that are safer for women and girls, as ministers try to tackle what they describe as systemic unfairness in people’s ability to walk around their own neighbourhood.The guidance, being drawn up by Active Travel England (ATE), is still being finalised but is expected to include measures such as better lighting and CCTV, and replacing dark underpasses with street-level crossings.Officials will also look at initiatives from other countries, such as schemes in Spain and Sweden which allow women to ask bus drivers to drop them between stops at night to minimise how long they have to walk in the dark, something which can be particularly useful in more rural areas.To coincide with the guidance, polling commissioned by ATE showed that nearly three-quarters of women said they changed their routes in winter to avoid walking in dark places, with 88% saying they felt unsafe walking alone after dark.Local transport minister Lilian Greenwood described the guidance for English councils as both a fundamental issue of fairness and also a way to improve levels of physical activity among women and girls, which tend to be lower than their equivalents for men and boys

1 day ago
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Police to reassess Morgan McSweeney phone theft over address error

Police are revisiting a closed investigation into the theft of Morgan McSweeney’s phone after admitting they recorded the wrong address when he reported the crime.Keir Starmer’s former chief of staff told the Metropolitan police that his phone was stolen in central London when he was returning home from a restaurant on 20 October last year, the Times reported.The phone is thought to hold messages relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as British ambassador, which could be lost if the phone remains unfound. Earlier on Tuesday, the Met had said they were “too busy” to investigate the snatched phone.The WhatsApp messages of aides and ministers are due to be published in the next tranche of the Mandelson files and the prime minister is said to be braced for potential further resignations over their contents

1 day ago
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Starmer’s government increasing spending on foreign trips, figures show

Keir Starmer’s government is spending an increasing amount on foreign trips, with almost 40 visits abroad adding up to more than £4m since he took office, the latest transparency figures have showed.The prime minister had his most costly quarter for foreign travel in the last three months of 2025, with eight trips adding up to £1.2m.The most expensive was his three-day visit to the Cop climate conference in Brazil, along with 29 officials, costing £413,000.The trade trip to India with 45 staff on a commercial flight cost £341,000, while the G20 in Johannesburg along with 30 staff on an RAF plane came in at £367,000

1 day ago
technologySee all
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Matt Brittin: why the BBC’s new Doctor Who-loving boss may not have much time for sleep

about 12 hours ago
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Meta ordered to pay $375m after being found liable in child exploitation case

1 day ago
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OpenAI shutters AI video generator Sora in abrupt announcement

1 day ago
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Baltimore sues Elon Musk’s AI company over Grok’s fake nude images

1 day ago
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Protect men and boys from manosphere influencers, Labour MPs tell Ofcom

1 day ago
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Divide between Silicon Valley and ordinary people grows ever larger

1 day ago

Drama amid the deluge: 50 years since James Hunt won F1 world title in Japan

about 16 hours ago
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Flamboyant Briton won his first and only world championship in dramatic fashion in Japan in the last race of the 1976 seasonNiki Lauda once described James Hunt as “one of my few real friends in racing”, the great rivals sharing a genuine bond even as they fought fiercely for the Formula One world championship in 1976,Its destination was decided at the Japanese Grand Prix – where the sport heads for the third race of this season on Sunday – with this year marking the 50th anniversary of an extraordinary contest when Hunt won his only F1 title in an engrossing finale,The Fuji Speedway was shrouded in rain and mist and the race start was delayed on that afternoon in late October,Hunt, always tense before a race, was wound up like a spring,The battle between the two drivers, Lauda at Ferrari and Hunt with McLaren, had been hard-fought from the off but 1976 was exceptional more than anything else in that Lauda was still in the fight at all.

Only two months before Fuji he had the huge accident at the Nürburgring that had almost killed him.That he had returned at all was astonishing, perhaps the greatest individual feat of will and determination in the sport’s history, but then taking it to the wire was almost as remarkable.The season had also been marked by the bad blood between Ferrari and McLaren, of protest and counterprotest as the teams wrangled and politicked back and forth.On track Lauda had enjoyed the edge and was 23 points – in the old-money scoring of 10 for a win – ahead after Hunt had been controversially disqualified from the British GP at Brands Hatch, the round before the Nürburgring.After the accident in which Lauda was pulled from the burning wreckage of his Ferrari, the driver missed only two races before his miraculous return at Monza.

His championship lead was down to five points and when Hunt then took two victories in succession at Mosport Park in Canada and Watkins Glen in the US, the Briton trailed by only three points as they flew to Japan.The interest and scrutiny on the finale was off the scale.Hunt’s boisterous, playboy personality was as infectious as it was fascinating to fans and the media, while Lauda carried the weight of all the attention that had unsurprisingly surrounded his comeback.The pair were centre stage of a drama that had seemed to build far beyond the mere racing, which for both drivers finally came as something of a relief.Qualifying had been relatively straightforward, Hunt and Lauda in second and third behind Mario Andretti.

However, on race day there was to be no simple narrative.The track, nestled in the shadow of Mount Fuji, was engulfed by a storm.Visibility on the main straight was down to 200m and the start delayed, as all agreed racing was impossible.Spectators sat stoically beneath umbrellas in the grandstands as the pressure continued to build.Hunt, his mind elsewhere, ambled to a fence, urinating in full view of the crowd.

The championship remained in limbo until the organisers and race director decided it was time to start, prompted by their obligations to the TV broadcasters, although conditions had barely improved.Lauda’s response was typically blunt.“I stood up and said: ‘Are you guys fucking crazy?’” he later recalled.“The rain has not stopped.It’s got worse, you cannot do this.

’”No one was happy but Hunt had made it clear he would compete if the race was to run.He made his way to his car across a plank McLaren had laid down in the pit lane to traverse the puddles swamping the Tarmac.Lauda had already reached a different conclusion.He knew the title was on the line but would not race in the treacherous conditions.“I told Ferrari beforehand I would do one lap, which I did, and then I stopped,” he said.

“I have no regrets.I would do the same again.But I have to say that without my accident, maybe, I would have had the reserves to do it.”Hunt took the lead from Andretti at the off but after that one lap Lauda entered the pits and came to a halt.Yet the title was still not yet decided.

Hunt needed to finish fourth and he duly eked out a lead as finally the storm relented and the track began to dry.However, he then missed the boards from the team telling him to cool the wet tyres in standing water and with five laps to go his left tyres deflated and he was forced to pit.It was slow in an era where stops were far from the technological masterpieces of today.With front and rear needing changing at the same time, the team physically had to lift the front of the car while the jack was used at the rear.The McLaren crew hurled themselves at it as the tension ratcheted up even further.

It looked to have cost the championship.Hunt emerged in fifth with four laps remaining and for two laps he could not make up a place, the title slipping from his fingers.Then, with typical bravado for such a larger than life character, he made a final charge that took him past Alan Jones and Clay Regazzoni.It was enough but, in a final dramatic flourish, Hunt did not know.On returning to the pits he angrily berated his team while their team principal, Teddy Mayer, was forced to shout “James, you’ve won!” at him repeatedly until he finally took it on board.

He had taken the title in Japan by one point in what remains one of the great championship deciders, his moment of triumph notably marked also by his huge respect for the path his great friend Lauda had chosen.“I think Niki made absolutely the right decision.I still feel as I felt before the start, that it was madness to start in those conditions,” he said.“I gotta respect the decision they made.I think it was crazy to start the race but now I’m kinda glad we did.

”