Lando Norris backs Max Verstappen to stay in F1 after drivers win rule changes

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Lando Norris has said he believes Max Verstappen will continue to race in Formula One but that it would be “a miss” for the sport if the four-time world champion did decide to leave owing to his dissatisfaction with the way this season’s new regulations have affected how drivers race,Verstappen has been outspoken in his dislike of the new regulations and their focus on electrical energy management that now makes up almost 50% of the car’s power output,He has intimated he might leave the sport but, with the rules having been adjusted by the FIA in an effort to address concerns of all drivers this week, Norris felt the Dutchman would remain in F1,“Hopefully things get better and I just saw that he said he wants to win the fifth world championship at the minute, so I’m sure he’ll stay longer than people say,” Norris said,The McLaren driver, who is the defending world champion, noted, however, that it would very much be F1’s loss if Verstappen left because he was disenchanted.

“It would be a shame for the sport, it would be a miss for the sport if that does happen because he probably is one of the best drivers you’ll see in Formula One ever,” he said,“It would be a shame for us because as much as he makes our lives incredibly tough at times, he’s always good fun to race against and it’s always cool to race against someone that’s won four world championships,You always feel like you want to race against the best in the world and he certainly is one of them, so it would be a loss for the sport,”On Monday F1 announced the changes to the regulations, which will come into force at the next round in Miami on 3 May,The adjustments focus on the parameters of the energy recovery management during qualifying and racing.

Both Norris and his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri expressed cautious optimism that the adjustments would indeed lead to a better experience behind the wheel.“The two main things we [drivers] wanted addressing was reinstating the challenge in qualifying and making things more natural in the way it should be in qualifying and being able to reduce the closing speeds and the speed differences in the race in unexpected places,” said Piastri.“The FIA took it very seriously.F1 took it very seriously.I think that’s reflected in some of the changes and the dialogue’s been very good.

We’ll have to wait and see if we need further changes,We probably had ideas of other things that you could change but they’re not things you can change from one weekend to the next,They’re from year to year or even longer term than that,“I think the FIA did a good job of recognising our concerns and acting in what seemed like the most appropriate way,”Norris was happy responding to all enquiries on Verstappen and the regulations after last week, during an interview by the Guardian’s Donald McRae, the driver’s personal management team stated he would not answer questions relating to the new regulations or his rival drivers Verstappen and George Russell.

Norris was apologetic at the stance of his management at the time and said he was happy to answer the questions but the interview was brought to a halt by his managerial team.On Wednesday Norris was speaking at an event at his team’s HQ, the McLaren technology centre in Woking and embraced all questions, as is always the case when he is with McLaren and the driver continues to enjoy a friendly, open relationship with the media.
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Man admits rape and religiously aggravated assault after court confrontation

A man who racially abused a Sikh woman as he raped her has pleaded guilty to the assault after being confronted in court by a member of the public.John Ashby pleaded guilty to rape, religiously aggravated assault, intentional strangulation, and robbery of the woman at her home in Walsall.Ashby initially pleaded not guilty but unexpectedly changed his pleas after he was sworn at by a member of the public in Birmingham crown court.The 32-year-old, of no fixed abode, asked to see his barrister and changed his pleas about an hour after being sworn at and told to “sort your shit out” by a member of public who approached the dock.The victim, who is in her 20s, was due to give evidence on Tuesday

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Gut microbiome can reveal risk of Parkinson’s, scientists say

Changes to microbes that live in the gut can identify people at greater risk of Parkinson’s disease long before symptoms develop, according to work that also raises hopes for new therapies.Researchers discovered signature changes in the gut microbiome that are more pronounced in people with a genetic risk for Parkinson’s and even more stark in those diagnosed with the disease.The signature could help doctors spot patients at risk of Parkinson’s years before they display clear symptoms and suggests that healthier diets and treatments that reshape the microbiome might prevent or delay the disease.Prof Anthony Schapira, the head of clinical and movement neurosciences at University College London and lead investigator on the study, said it was the first time a microbial signature in Parkinson’s patients had been seen in people with a genetic susceptibility but had yet to develop symptoms. The signature appears to become stronger as the disease progresses

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Nearly fivefold increase in children in unregulated social care settings in England

Ministers must get to grips with the “national scandal” of England’s shadow child social care system, the children’s commissioner has warned, as a report reveals the number of children in unregulated settings has increased by more than 370% in five years.Some of the most vulnerable children in England are being temporarily placed in unregulated caravans, Airbnbs and holiday camps, which risk the “accumulation of increasing levels of harm for children who have already faced enough distress for several lifetimes”, according to the report.Analysis of Ofsted data has shown that cases of unregistered homes in England increased from 144 in 2020-21 to 680 in 2024-25, which experts say is likely to be an underestimation of the true figure, according to the policy analysts at Public First, who conducted the research for the charity Commonweal Housing. The Care Standards Act 2000 legally requires all children’s homes to be registered with Ofsted.Private companies have been accused of charging local governments “exorbitant” fees to look after children in unsuitable settings when a bed in an Ofsted-inspected children’s home or fostering placement cannot be found

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England left with ‘toilet deserts’ as public facilities decline by 14% in a decade

The number of public toilets in England has fallen by 14% in a decade, harming public health and creating vast swathes of lavatory “deserts” and unpleasant environments, a report says.The analysis by the Royal Society for Public Health found a “significant shortfall” in provision, with 15,481 people for each public toilet in England. That contrasts sharply with Scotland, where there are 8,500 people for each toilet, and Wales, with 6,748.The analysis was based on 221 freedom of information responses from 309 English councils. The number of toilets was down 14% on 2016

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The fight against medical misogyny has a long way to go | Letters

I welcome the relaunched women’s health strategy (Streeting relaunches women’s health strategy to tackle ‘medical misogyny’, 14 April) but with caution. The system appears responsive, but the root causes in health inequality outcomes remain untouched.It names urgent issues many women have long experienced: navigating the gynaecology referral queue that would stretch over 191 miles (if waiting in person), medical gaslighting, delayed diagnoses and systemic bias.However, Wes Streeting’s tenacity on centering all women’s “voices”, and ensuring that no woman is left fighting to be heard isn’t convincing, particularly when women of colour have been crying out loud for years, with little to no change in our reproductive health outcomes.Many of us know what that feels like: seeing a GP about severe period pain and trying to explain how it disrupts our life

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‘Labels protect us’: Olivia Nervo wants reproductive coercion to be a standalone offence – she is not alone

When the Grammy award winning songwriter, Olivia Nervo, agreed to start a family with her partner she believed she was in “a monogamous, committed relationship leading to a future”, and had never heard of reproductive coercion.Her world came crashing down when she was six months pregnant and she found out that her partner was in a relationship with another woman who was also pregnant, and with whom he already had a child.It was a discovery that led her to learn about reproductive coercion, a form of controlling behaviour in which someone interferes with an individual’s ability to make decisions about their own body. The Labour MP, Natalie Fleet, led a debate in parliament on the issue last month in which she said it was “so important – in the public interest, even – that the story of Olivia Nervo is heard”.The court declined to make any finding as to whether there had been reproductive coercion in Nervo’s case, with Fleet describing the doctrine as something the legal system in England and Wales “still struggles to recognise”