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US consumer confidence hits record low as Americans fret about rising prices; jobs report beats forecasts – as it happened

Newsflash: the US economy added more jobs than expected in April.Non-farm payrolls rose by 115,000 last month, the Bureau for Labor Statistics reports, beating forecasts of a 62,000 increase.That’s still a slowdown compared with March, though – where the NFP has been revised up to 185,000 jobs, from 178,000 initially.But February’s data is even worse than previously thought – payrolls that month are now estimated to have fallen by 156,000, down from a previous estimate of a 133,000 decline.Those revisions mean employment in February and March combined is 16,000 lower than previously reported

about 9 hours ago
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UK borrowing costs fall and pound rises after Starmer says he will stay as PM

UK government borrowing costs fell and the pound rose on Friday as Keir Starmer vowed to remain as prime minister despite the Labour party losing hundreds of council seats across England.Investors calculated that some of the intense pressure on Starmer’s leadership had eased, as Labour appeared on track for smaller losses than election experts had predicted.The yield – effectively the interest rate – had jumped earlier this week, amid fears that the prime minister could face a leadership challenge if the results from the local elections and the devolved parliaments in Scotland and Wales were particularly poor.But after Starmer insisted he would not walk away, the yield on benchmark UK 10-year gilts was down 5 basis points, or 0.05 of a percentage point, at 4

about 9 hours ago
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AI-powered surveillance company Palantir created a chore coat. Great, now I have no choice but to burn mine | Van Badham

It’s taken me years to find a chore coat with a cut that flatters my big tits but, now that I finally own one, I want to incinerate it.Such is the power of brand contamination; infamous data surveillance megacorp Palantir, has decided to bang a logo on a chore coat to sell as corporate merch.Chore coats are the traditional short denim or twill jacket of the 19th-century French working class. Palantir, however, is a company whose public words and commercial-in-confidence activities are inspiring local calls to have its contracts cancelled and its business banned.The gentle French garment is now as cursed as whatever “Marie Amazonette” will ever wear to the Met Gala

about 12 hours ago
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‘Being human helps’: despite rise of AI is there still hope for Europe’s translators?

In February 2022, while he was plugging away at rendering the US writer Dana Spiotta’s novel Wayward into French, the literary translator Yoann Gentric decided he needed a bit of light relief. He would test whether AI could put him out of work.Gentric had been grappling with a short non-verbal sentence that described the book’s protagonist’s feelings upon opening a window: “Bright, sharp night air, bracing.” He put the prompt into DeepL, a neural-network-powered machine translation engine that regularly outperforms Google Translate in accuracy assessments.The proposed translation was reassuring, with his job security in mind: L’air de la nuit, vif et vif, était vivifiant (The night air, lively and lively, was enlivening

about 23 hours ago
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Novak Djokovic accepts ‘new reality’ after returning with defeat at Italian Open

Novak Djokovic believes he must accept the “new reality” of his continuous physical struggles in the latter part of his career as his return to competition after an injury-ravaged clay-court season ended in a second-round Italian Open loss to the young Croatian qualifier Dino Prizmic, who recovered courageously from a set down to topple his idol 2-6, 6-2, 6-4.Djokovic has not competed since the Indian Wells Masters event two months ago, his only other tournament since his spectacular run to the Australian Open final. As the fourth seed in Rome, he received a first-round bye. Despite starting the match positively, the 38-year-old was outplayed by his 20-year-old opponent, who wore the Serb down physically and played bold tennis to escape with the greatest victory of his career.“It’s not an ideal preparation, to be honest,” Djokovic said

about 7 hours ago
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County cricket as it happened: Nottinghamshire v Surrey, Glamorgan v Somerset and more

The vacancy sign over one England openers slot continues to swing. The selectors fancy James Rew, but he keeps wicket and bats in the middle order for Somerset. How to square the circle? Friday’s answer was Rew opening for Somerset for the first time in his first-class career. It was a short-lived experiment, Rew lasting just seven balls before being bowled for four.Around Rew there were runs for young Josh Thomas (71) and Tom Lammonby (45) before Glamorgan debutant Tom Norton picked the first of three wickets

about 8 hours ago
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Martha’s rule may have saved more than 500 lives in England since 2024

8 days ago

Nigel Farage hails ‘historic shift in politics’ after Reform UK election gains

about 5 hours ago
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Nigel Farage hailed sweeping election wins for Reform UK as a “historic shift in British politics” on a day when the populist party made gains at the expense of Labour and the Conservatives.Reform made advances in heartland areas of both parties, clocking up substantial early results in the English local elections by taking control of Essex county council, Havering – its first London local authority – and Sunderland city council.However, the results were not without setbacks, for example in Harlow, a past general election bellwether, while one prominent pollster suggested the party may have peaked and that Farage would have reason to be “privately worried”.Nevertheless, Reform established beachheads for the next general election in areas including Essex, home to the seats of prominent Tory MPs including Kemi Badenoch and James Cleverly, where Farage’s party went from having a single representative to taking control of the council.“It’s a big, big day, not just for our party but for a complete reshaping of British politics in every way,” Farage said as he appeared on Friday outside Havering town hall, in a borough on the eastern border of Greater London where many voters identify more closely with neighbouring Essex.

Farage said the party was “two-thirds” of the way to where it wanted to be for the general election when it came to planning and fundraising.The door was now closed to Tory defectors, he said, but “the time is now” for conversations with “patriotic old Labour” MPs.Reform’s first major gain was Essex, a key target for Farage’s party and a county council where the Tories had enjoyed majority control since 2001.Fifty-three Reform councillors were elected, a smaller majority than some had tipped, and will face a 24-strong opposition that includes 13 Tories.Reform’s home affairs spokesperson, Zia Yusuf, said: “If that sort of result was replicated in the general election, Kemi Badenoch would lose her seat,” referring to the Tory leader’s constituency of North West Essex.

Suffolk county council was the second major local authority to go to Reform, whose 41 seats came largely at the expense of the Tories,Reform’s capture of Sunderland city council, which had been Labour-controlled since 1973, was another seismic result,The party won 43 seatsin a city where a strong leave vote had been one of the turning points of the 2016 referendum on leaving the EU,However, while the results showed Reform had gained support across swathes of the country, some targets eluded the party,The Tories secured all 11 district council seats available in Harlow, Essex.

Reform also fell short of taking control of Bexley council, one of its targets in London.Reform made a breakthrough in the elections to the Welsh Senedd, finishing second with 34 seats.Plaid Cymru was the largest party but six seats short of a majority, while Labour won just nine and finished third.The elections expert Peter Kellner said that while Reform was likely to end up with gains of more than 1,000 seats overall, there were some warning signs.“Reform may well be on course for a record number of gains by any party in any elections, and in normal circumstances this would be astonishing.

But if you compare it with a year ago it seems both in terms of seats and vote shares they are not going to do as well,” he said.Reform won 41% of all seats contested across England in last year’s local elections, while this year’s tally appeared by Friday afternoon to be about 35%.“We have that record on recent polls and elections, and it seems clear that Reform has peaked,” Kellner said.Any further slips in support would make a general election majority on this share of the vote much more difficult.Reform’s vote share in English council seats so far has grown the most in areas with greater socioeconomic deprivation, early analysis by the Guardian showed.

Figures from 691 wards show the party gained by an average of 20 percentage points in the least deprived areas and 30 percentage points in the most deprived areas,Asked on LBC radio if Reform could form a government without winning big cities and metropolitan areas, Farage said: “Oh, yes … every party has areas where it’s weak and where it’s strong,” He insisted his party was competitive across vast geographical swathes of the UK,At a rally on Friday night, Farage said his most important piece of advice to incoming Essex councillors was to keep disagreements behind closed doors,“Please heed my advice.

There are times when it’s better to bite your tongue, go and sit behind a desk, close the door, argue it out.But after four and a half years of psychodrama, with the last Conservative government, with Labour about to start ripping themselves apart, that’s the last thing of the voting public want to see.So, please, please, bear that in mind.”Additional reporting by Isaaq Tomkins