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Who is Al Carns? Former Marine and Labour minister with sights on leadership

A former special forces colonel, government minister Al Carns was this week on manouevres warning that the UK needs to be preparing for war with Russia.“The shadow of war is knocking on Europe’s door once more. That’s the reality. We’ve got to be prepared to deter it,” he said, in comments that go beyond previous warnings by his boss, the defence secretary, John Healey.“Collectively, everybody – what is their role if we get caught in an existential crisis, and what do they need to be aware they need to do and what they can’t do, and how do we mobilise the nation to support a military endeavour?”It was stark language from the 45-year-old Scottish-born MP, who has had an exceptionally swift rise to his role of armed forces minister

1 day ago
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Starmer to pick new US ambassador as relations with Trump tested

Keir Starmer is poised to choose a new ambassador to Washington from a shortlist of three as relations with the US are tested over Ukraine and Donald Trump’s attacks on European leaders.The prime minister held interviews with three finalists for the role this week, the Guardian has learned, with Downing Street preparing to make an appointment before the end of the year.The trio of candidates seen by Starmer were Varun Chandra, his business adviser who has helped negotiate a series of deals with the Trump administration, Christian Turner, a diplomat due to become ambassador to the UN, and Nigel Casey, the British ambassador to Russia.Whoever is chosen will be taking up the role at a critical stage in US-UK relations, with insiders warning of rising tensions over Ukraine and the White House’s pugnacious national security strategy.Chandra, a former managing partner at the corporate intelligence firm Hakluyt, has played a central role in negotiating bilateral deals with the US on trade, tech and pharmaceuticals and is seen as the frontrunner

1 day ago
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Infighting, broken promises and insisting on the national anthem: what seven months of Reform UK in charge actually looks like

Nigel Farage’s party is gunning for power – so what is it like in the places where they’ve already got it? We embedded with Lancashire county council to find out what happens when rhetoric meets reality22 May 2025: a new dawn for Lancashire. Outside Preston’s grand old county hall, 53 brand new Reform UK councillors in turquoise ties – and one petite woman with an enormous turquoise hair bow – are hot-footing it past a gaggle of protesters for their first full council meeting. Most keep their heads down and get into the building as quickly as possible. But Joel Tetlow, a first-time politician who has made a few unfortunate headlines before even taking his seat, is intrigued. He stands in the doorway, vaping, as a demonstrator bellows: “Reform is a far right party and Nigel Farage is a racist and a fascist!”Tetlow – late 40s with a full head of vertiginous hair, wearing a powder-blue three-piece suit – insists he isn’t bothered

1 day ago
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Government’s process behind tackling violence against women ‘worse than under the Tories’

Leading organisations have criticised the development of the government’s flagship violence against women and girls strategy, calling the process chaotic, haphazard and “worse than under the Tories”.Ministers are gearing up for a policy announcement blitz before the publication of the long-awaited plan next week.Important voices in the violence against women and girls (VAWG) sector have privately accused ministers of sidelining first-hand expertise and expressed concern that the strategy will not be sufficiently radical to achieve the government’s flagship manifesto promise to halve the rate of VAWG in the UK in a decade.Initially expected in spring, the VAWG strategy was delayed until summer and then autumn.On Friday it emerged that schoolboys would be the target of the strategy, which the BBC reported would be built around the pillars of preventing radicalisation of young men, stopping abusers and supporting victims

2 days ago
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Reform UK claims it has overtaken Labour as Britain’s largest party

Reform UK says it is now the largest political party in Britain and has overtaken Labour, which has reportedly seen its membership fall below 250,000.Nigel Farage’s party says it has more than 268,000 members on the live tracker displayed on its website.Farage said: “As we have suspected for some time, Reform has overtaken Labour to become the largest political party in British politics – a huge milestone on our journey to win the next election. The age of two-party politics is dead.”Meanwhile, the Times reported that, according to internal figures, the Labour party’s paid-up membership had fallen below 250,000

2 days ago
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‘There’s been a Badenoch bounce’: is the Tory leader finally cutting through?

At a Conservative donors event last week, Kemi Badenoch was asked for a selfie by the former Spice Girl Geri Horner. The Tory leader was, her allies say, a little bemused. But they were clear about what the approach meant: cut-through.Badenoch’s leadership got off to a poor start. Still reeling from the Tories’ worst general election defeat, she took over a diminished and disheartened party, which was languishing in the polls and facing an existential threat in the form of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK

2 days ago
technologySee all
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Disney wants you to AI-generate yourself into your favorite Marvel movie

3 days ago
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Musk calls Doge only ‘somewhat successful’ and says he would not do it again

4 days ago
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ICE is using smartwatches to track pregnant women, even during labor: ‘She was so afraid they would take her baby’

4 days ago
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From ‘glacier aesthetic’ to ‘poetcore’: Pinterest predicts the visual trends of 2026 based on its search data

5 days ago
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UK police forces lobbied to use biased facial recognition technology

5 days ago
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Trump clears way for Nvidia to sell powerful AI chips to China

5 days ago

Ten-try Harlequins cruise to Champions Cup rout of understrength Bayonne

about 7 hours ago
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Christmas is a time for giving and Bayonne presented this game to Harlequins by selecting an inexperienced side who realistically stood no chance.Manu Tuilagi and Gareth Anscombe were listed as injured, along with plenty of others, but four frontline players were rested.There was nothing wrong with Bayonne giving Jonah Thompson, a 20-year-old Australian, his professional debut against rugby royalty in south-west London: but the fact he is a flanker, and was pressed into service on the right wing, was arguably pushing it a bit far.The Champions Cup is supposedly an elite competition and that should be celebrated whenever appropriate.But the current format means too many clubs are selecting weakened sides for matches they regard as unwinnable – or rather, when they think others are more winnable.

It is short-changing fans.Quins scored 10 tries, nine of them converted by Marcus Smith, the player of the match, but it rarely felt as if they were obliged to change up from second gear.“We can only play what they put out there,” said the Harlequins senior coach, Jason Gilmore.“It’s a bit like that in the Champions Cup at the moment.Are the travelling teams full strength all the time? Probably not.

But you’ve got to make sure you get your five points at home.”The hosts, initially, proved incapable of holding on to their own ball when it counted.There was early pace and tempo, but handling errors too from Luke Northmore and Oscar Beard.Smith finally injected a bit of quality, dabbing a grubber kick for Cadan Murley to score on 22 minutes.Tom Spring, Bayonne’s young fly-half, then failed to read a Smith cross-kick, allowing the second-row Kieran Treadwell to gallop over, and Fin Baxter capitalised on more weak defending to score from close range.

That was 21-0 – apparently game over – unless the visitors could muster a comeback like Glasgow’s magnificent effort against Toulouse and Antoine Dupont on Saturday.Harlequins David; Cleaves, Beard (Waghorn 54), Northmore (Benson 63), Murley (capt.), Smith, Porter (Friday 57); Baxter (Wenger 58), Walker (Riley 54), Delgado (Hobson 47), Pagadizábal, Lewies (Treadwell 24), Kenningham, Evans, Carr (Cunningham-South 51).Tries Murley, Treadwell 2, Baxter, Delgado, Porter 2, M Smith, Riley, Benson.Cons M Smith 9.

Sin-bin Evans 34.Bayonne Orabe; Thompson, Maqala (Jantjies 66), Mori, Hannoun; Spring (Boyle-Tiatia 57), Tilloles; Calles (Cormenier 51), Martin (Giudicelli 51), Setiano (Fepulea’i 51), Iandolino (Marchesin 75), Paulos, Fischer (capt., Traversier 51), Capilla (Heguy 51), Ariceta.Tries Paulos, Spring.Cons Spring 2.

Sin-bin Iandolino 56, Heguy 64,Referee Andrew BraceWhen Spring chased a kick over the top and the Argentinian Lucas Paulos burrowed over, Will Evans was shown a yellow card into the bargain,At 21-7 and with Quins a man down, the threat of a contest hung in the air, before the prop Pedro Delgado surged over for his first Harlequins five-pointer,A bonus point secured, to go with the one Quins claimed in losing to Leinster last weekend,After the break, when the scrum-half Will Porter darted over in the corner, Smith added a fifth conversion and that was 35-7.

Spring’s lively running led to a second Bayonne try when he jinked over on the right having accepted a beautiful one-handed offload by the hooker Lucas Martin.Porter added his second try before Chandler Cunningham-South, ominously for Bayonne, appeared off the home bench.Baptiste Heguy was the second visiting player to be sent to the sin-bin, leaving them with 13 men for a minute or so, and another Quins replacement, Sam Riley, capitalised with two tries inside five minutes.Toulon came out on top over Bath in an entertaining nine-try contest and took a 45-34 victory at the Stade Mayol.The result means all six teams in Pool Two have a win and a loss to their name after their first two matches but Bath's bonus point means they top the table with six points, with the other sides on five.

Finn Russell slotted two penalties either side of Brian Alainu'uese's try which gave Toulon a 7-6 lead.Mateo Garcia kicked three points for the hosts following a ruck infringement but Bath went ahead through Ted Hill with their first try of the game before Garcia knocked over his second penalty to make it 13-13.Toulon went eight points to the good when Juan Ignacio Brex finished off after Kyle Sinckler's powerful run, that was before Garcia kicked his third penalty of the game - but back came Bath again when Russell's delayed pass allowed Santi Carreras to cross the whitewash.Sinckler's powerful run proved troublesome again in Toulon's next try as Gael Drean picked a line to race clear and re-establish the French side's eight point lead but Bath were not going away themselves, Arthur Green dotted down to bring the deficit back to one.Toulon got their try bonus point through Lewis Ludlam but Max Ojomoh's short pass let Louie Hennessey cut the gap to four points for Bath before another penalty and Teddy Baubigny's try finished things off in the French side's favour.

In the other Pool 2 match, Edinburgh were brought back down to earth in the Champions Cup as they fell to a 33-0 defeat at Castres.The visitors claimed a stunning win over Toulon on their return to the competition last week but they were well beaten in France this time.Bristol ran riot with nine tries as they thrashed Pau 61-12 at Ashton Gate in Pool 4.Eight different try scorers got in on the act as Bristol made it two wins from two and scored all 61 of their points – as Tom Jordan kicked eight successful conversions – within the opening hour to claim a dominant win.The England prop Ellis Genge powered over from close range open a destructive afternoon of scoring and Fitz Harding slipped the ball to Benjamin Grondona in a two-on-one situation to go under the posts for their second try.

Things were threatening to get a bit ugly for the French visitors when Bristol ran in three more tries before the break courtesy of Kieran Marmion, Kalaveti Ravouvou and Gabriel Oghre’s score at the back of the maul on the stroke of half-time,There were no signs of letting up in the second period either, Benhard Janse van Rensburg crossed over four minutes into the half before Joe Batley made it 47-0,Pau got on the scoresheet through Fabien Brau-Boirie’s try under the posts but Aidan Boshoff and Grondona – who crossed over for his brace – extended the hosts’ score, while Brau-Boirie’s second try was nothing more than a consolation for the visitors,PA MediaJamie Benson ran in the ninth, Thompson’s profound lack of wing experience exposed again,The Australian should have a bright future and none of this is his fault.

Blame the format, blame the coaches, but don’t blame him,The Ireland international Treadwell made it 10 tries but it was long since over by then,Asked if fans want full-strength sides competing in the Champions Cup Gilmore said: “I think the players do too,They’re competitive beasts,There’s probably different factors in that, when you’re squishing the competition amongst Gallagher Prem and Top 14.

“We had this last week, we rested a few players, but by international guidelines you’ve got to … it’s hard to get the balance of it all in terms of mixing competitions, but I just look at what the boys want.They want the best every week.Is that possible for clubs? It can be really difficult.”