I have decided to stop using a mirror – and I know it will change my life | Polly Hudson | The Guardian

Keyword – Opinion
Trefwoorden – Life and style, Beauty
Title – I have decided to stop using a mirror – and I know it will change my life | Polly Hudson | The Guardian
Author – https://www.theguardian.com/profile/polly-hudson
Link – I have decided to stop using a mirror – and I know it will change my life | Polly Hudson | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-18T10:00:04.000Z
Category – Opinion
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jun/18/i-decided-to-stop-using-a-mirror-i-know-it-will-change-my-life

R ats in labs eventually work out which behaviour stops the electric shocks, but I had to be taught by a podcast. Comedian Hannah Berner was a recent guest on Armchair Expert, and revealed she hardly ever looks in the mirror.

“It has information you don’t need about you,” she explained.

Host Dax Shepard immediately leapt on board with the revelatory theory: “I’d say over the course of my life, the amount of times I looked in the mirror and was pumped is certainly under 1%. I’ve never looked and been like: ‘Let’s do this, man!’”

So simple, so true. And yet opting out has never occurred to me. Looking in the mirror – checking, monitoring, surveilling – is just what you do, right?

Not Berner. Instead, she consults the mirror within .

“I am delusional,” she admitted. “I think I know what I look like and it’s the best photo I’ve ever taken. And when you walk into a room like that, even if you have stuff in your teeth, it helps.”

This is a potentially life-changing mindset. Mirrors are foe, not friend, and blissful ignorance is the key to confidence.

Berner is not the first to bring this stance to the mainstream: in 2017, Claudia Winkleman supplied unimaginative people with a punchline about her eyeliner by disclosing that she never looks in the mirror. When she was growing up, her mum banned them from the house – “She wanted to teach us that appearance is a waste of time, it’s not in the least bit important. Read books, be funny, be clever, be chatty, this is how you make an omelette …” – and now she only has one mirror, for teeth-brushing.

That’s it. I’m going cold turkey, which is, coincidentally, not a million miles away from what I resembled the last time I glanced at my reflection. Mirror, mirror, on the wall, turns out you’re the unfairest of them all.

Polly Hudson is a freelance writer

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People in Albania: share your thoughts on the recent ‘not for sale’ protests | Albania | The Guardian

Keyword – World news
Trefwoorden – Albania, Europe, World news
Title – People in Albania: share your thoughts on the recent ‘not for sale’ protests | Albania | The Guardian
Author – https://www.theguardian.com/profile/guardian-community-team
Link – People in Albania: share your thoughts on the recent ‘not for sale’ protests | Albania | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-16T14:13:14.000Z
Category – News
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/16/people-in-albania-share-your-thoughts-on-the-recent-not-for-sale-protests

For the last two weeks, Albanians have been protesting against a planned luxury resort backed by a company linked to Jared Kushner , the son-in-law of Donald Trump , near Vlora.

If it goes ahead, the development would occupy parts of an environmentally sensitive area which includes the uninhabited outcrop of Sazan and wetlands and coastal habitats in the surrounding marine national park – home to the Mediterranean monk seal and more than 200 bird species – including flamingos and Dalmatian pelicans, according to BirdLife International .

On Saturday, villagers from Rrjoll, located in an area of sandy beaches and pine forests in north-western Albania , protested against another development project , saying it was being built on their confiscated land.

We would like to hear from Albanians about what they think about the development project.

f you’re having trouble using the form click here . Read terms of service here and privacy policy here .

Cambridge experts recreate 336-year-old garden to commemorate ‘father of natural history’ | Plants | The Guardian

Keyword – Environment
Trefwoorden – Plants, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Gardens, Isaac Newton, Science, UK news, Environment
Title – Cambridge experts recreate 336-year-old garden to commemorate ‘father of natural history’ | Plants | The Guardian
Author – https://www.theguardian.com/profile/donna-ferguson
Link – Cambridge experts recreate 336-year-old garden to commemorate ‘father of natural history’ | Plants | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-18T08:00:00.000Z
Category – News
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jun/18/cambridge-experts-recreate-336-year-old-garden-to-commemorate-father-of-natural-history

He coined the terms petal and pollen, helped to lay the foundations of modern biology and is widely regarded as the greatest English naturalist of the 17th century.

But it was while he was a young college tutor at Cambridge in the 1650s that the botanist John Ray – also known as “the father of natural history” – created his first known garden and began to systematically study plants for the first time.

Now, gardeners at Trinity College, Cambridge have dug up their front lawn and attempted to reimagine the historic garden Ray planted in the college, to commemorate the 400th anniversary of his birth next year.

Using clues from a 1690 engraving, they have created the garden in the exact location Ray is thought to have used, in front of a descendant of an apple tree that famously inspired another trailblazing scientist and Trinity alumnus: Isaac Newton .

Ray recorded many of the plants he planted in his garden when he became the first botanist to rigorously document the flora of an English county in his landmark text, Catalogue of Plants Growing Around Cambridge, published in Latin in 1660.

“He makes references to plants, saying ‘I grew this in our little Cambridge garden’ so I had to work out what that phrase was in Latin to find out what he grew,” said the head gardener, Karen Wells. “He would go around the county collecting plants and bring them back to the garden so that he could study them.”

It is estimated Ray tried to grow about 700 different types of plants in his garden, including fenland lichens and fungi that would only survive in boggy conditions and poisonous plants like American pokeweed and Dutchman’s pipe.

But Wells has instead focused on cultivating the drought-tolerant and pollinator-friendly plants that Ray chose, to encourage biodiversity, create climate resilience – and pre-empt any Agatha-Christie style murder plots.

Her planting list – like Ray’s – includes wood avens (a woodland herb with small yellow flowers), betony (a flowering mint), golden rod (a herbaceous perennial that grows in meadows), pasqueflower (a violet flower found in chalk and limestone grasslands) and white-flowered moth mullein (a biennial wildflower beloved by bees and butterflies).

“As soon as I planted the mullein, a bee started foraging on the flower,” she said. “I think the betony, which has pinky-purple flowers, is also going to be quite eye-catching and attractive to insects.”

Another medieval herb she has planted is a nod to the monarch who founded Trinity college in 1546: “We have put in Good King Henry – Ray wrote about how delicious the stems of it were, cooked in butter.”

As the project neared completion, ready for its official opening on Thursday, Wells was amazed to see the 336-year-old garden depicted in the 1690 engraving take shape before her eyes: “Creating this garden, I feel like I’ve time travelled.”

In 2005, a scientist who was trying to figure out where Newton had conducted his chemical experiments tested the site of the new garden , which is located directly beneath the former student’s rooms in the college. Prof Peter Spargo, of the University of Cape Town, discovered the soil contained higher-than-expected concentrations of copper, arsenic, gold, mercury and other metallic residues, as well as fragments of bricks and mortar, indicating he had finally pinpointed the exact location of Newton’s private laboratory.

Linked as it is to the work of both Ray and Newton, the new garden could be on “the most scientifically important spot of land in the 17th century”, said Prof Richard Serjeantson, who teaches history at Trinity.

Ray, who was the son of a blacksmith, arrived in Cambridge on a scholarship at the age of 16 to study rhetoric, logic and grammar. In a moving preface to his book about Cambridgeshire flora, which revolutionised botany by encouraging other naturalists to go out into the field and systematically document their local plants, he writes about the origins of his interest in the natural world.

“I had been rather unwell, and for the sake of both my mind and my body, I had to take a break from more demanding studies by either riding or walking,” he writes.

Serjeantson says Ray’s passion for local plants is inspiring: “We live in an age where you can get anything from anywhere in the world, but in an age that is also conscious of carbon footprints and invasive species, I think there’s an attractiveness to this garden that reflects the world of Cambridge and local flora.”

‘It’s supposed to make you uncomfortable’: French artist JR on transforming Paris’ oldest bridge into a cave | Art and design | The Guardian

Keyword – Art and design
Trefwoorden – Art and design, Installation, JR, Art, Culture, Paris, Europe, Christo
Title – ‘It’s supposed to make you uncomfortable’: French artist JR on transforming Paris’ oldest bridge into a cave | Art and design | The Guardian
Author – https://www.theguardian.com/profile/kim-willsher
Link – ‘It’s supposed to make you uncomfortable’: French artist JR on transforming Paris’ oldest bridge into a cave | Art and design | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-16T14:11:18.000Z
Category – Culture
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2026/jun/16/french-artist-jr-on-transforming-pont-neuf-into-a-cave-la-caverne-paris

W ith the backdrop of the Eiffel Tower to one side and Notre Dame to the other, Pont Neuf is not only Paris’s most picturesque bridge but, contrary to what its name suggests, it’s also the city’s oldest.

Yet as of today, Pont Neuf is no longer just a bridge but also an overground cave.

Vast swathes of fabric, woven to look like the stone on which Paris is built, have been inflated over the bridge, creating an art installation called La Caverne . It is a bonkers idea, and a direct tribute to Christo and his wife Jeanne-Claude wrapping the Pont Neuf more than 40 years ago .

The monumental installation is the work of the French artist and photographer known as JR, often called the French Banksy , whose previous installations include making the Louvre pyramid disappear, placing large portraits of Israelis and Palestinians working in the same jobs facing each other along the separation wall and Kikito, a giant picture of a toddler peering over the US-Mexico border fence.

La Caverne finally opened on Monday, 10 days late after the fabric was ripped by sudden gusts of wind requiring emergency repairs. It is billed as an immersive experience, “a crossing”, a “move into the unknown” evoking primeval fears of the dark and being trapped underground unable to escape.

The printed fabric forms a rocky passage with pillars and fissures made to resemble the Lutetian limestone quarried from the underground basins of the Paris region and on which the city, is built. The Pont Neuf, Notre Dame and the Louvre Museum were constructed from the same stone.

The subterranean ambience is heightened by sound – and smell. Thomas Bangalter , one half of Daft Punk , has created an undulating wind-tunnel sound effect; the air has the barely perceptible mustiness of damp soil and rock, created by an expert who makes perfumes in her day job.

JR says he hopes the technically challenging installation, 120m long and 18m high, will lead visitors to forget they are crossing a bridge in the middle of one of the world’s busiest cities.

All of which might have been possible were it not for the shouts of the (mostly American) groups of tourists whose overexcitement could not be contained by fake rock or “subtle soundscape” or the sudden jolt of material reality at the sight of the shop window immediately opposite the exit selling La Caverne souvenirs.

In an interview with the Guardian before the opening, JR, 43, explained his thinking behind the installation which came out of a meeting with Bulgarian-born Christo’s nephew Vladimir Yavachev, who runs the Christo and Jeanne-Claude Foundation .

“We were talking about the anniversary of the Pont Neuf wrapping and Vladimir suggested I do something. Not a wrap but my own thing,” he said. “And then I started dreaming and sketching and as I sketched, the idea of the cave emerged.”

He said the idea of a cave went back to the earliest origins of art when early humans designed on rock walls.

“You’re walking on the bridge. You know exactly where you are, you’re in the middle of Paris. But once you’ve passed the entrance you are somewhere else entirely, not just for a minute but for the whole time because you don’t see the light at the end of the tunnel.

“When we enter the cavern, we won’t see the exit. We’ll have to make a journey through our sources, our origins, to then catch a glimpse of the light. It’s supposed to make you uncomfortable in a certain way.”

Our interview takes place on the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express, the original train of Agatha Christie murder mystery fame. A boy from the Paris banlieue, JR used to tag trains and public transport tunnels with his initials before he found a camera left on a train at Charles de Gaulle airport.

Today, he is journeying the other side of the tracks. Two years ago he was invited to design L’Observatoire , a suite in an early 20th-century Orient Express carriage that he redesigned with the help of more than 100 artisans from across Europe. At an eye-watering £60-£80,000 for the 26-hour journey from Venice to Paris, it is now the world’s most expensive train ticket.

JR appears to have had an open cheque from the train owner Belmond, part of the luxury LVMH group, to create the carriage suite complete with brass bathtub, skylight that opens and closes like a camera aperture and a sitting room with fireplace, but he says L’Observatoire is not about wealth. “It’s art in motion … and something that will last.”

La Caverne, an ephemeral installation and a spectacular feat of engineering, will not. Despite opening 10 days late, it will close as planned on 28 June when the fabric cave will be pulled down and the material recycled.

“It’s like a circus that comes, puts on a spectacle and then it’s gone. But anyone who sees it will remember it every time they pass the Pont Neuf.”

La Caverne is at Pont Neuf, Paris, until 28 June

The audacious plan to refreeze the Arctic – podcast | Science | The Guardian

Keyword – Science
Trefwoorden – Science, Climate crisis, Environment, Sea ice
Title – The audacious plan to refreeze the Arctic – podcast | Science | The Guardian
Author – Madeleine Finlay
Link – The audacious plan to refreeze the Arctic – podcast | Science | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-18T05:11:33.000Z
Category – News
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/science/audio/2026/jun/18/inside-the-audacious-plan-to-refreeze-the-arctic-podcast

‘At first, the idea does sound crazy’: meet the scientists trying to refreeze the Arctic

Support the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod

Polls open in historic byelection in Makerfield that could determine Keir Starmer’s future – UK politics live | Politics | The Guardian

Keyword – Politics
Trefwoorden – Politics, UK news, Andy Burnham, Keir Starmer, Makerfield byelection, Greater Manchester
Title – Polls open in historic byelection in Makerfield that could determine Keir Starmer’s future – UK politics live | Politics | The Guardian
Author – https://www.theguardian.com/profile/tom-ambrose,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/fran-singh,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/siraj-datoo,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/rowena-mason,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/matty-edwards,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/severincarrell,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/tom-burgis,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/heatherstewart,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/alexandratopping,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/jakub-krupa,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/jessica-murray,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/peterwalker,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/pippacrerar,https://www.theguardian.com/profile/jessica-elgot
Link – Polls open in historic byelection in Makerfield that could determine Keir Starmer’s future – UK politics live | Politics | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-18T14:21:02.000Z
Category – News
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/politics/live/2026/jun/18/makerfield-byelection-polls-open-labour-leadership-andy-burnham-keir-starmer-latest-news-updates

Polls open in Makerfield for historic byelection that could determine Keir Starmer’s future

Hello and welcome to the UK politics live blog.

The people of Makerfield, a constituency sitting just outside of Wigan, have at last begun voting in what could be one of the most consequential byelections in British political history.

Since Labour MP Josh Simons resigned to allow the mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham a clear run at returning to parliament – and the opportunity to become prime minister – residents have been inundated with party campaigners and reporters.

Yesterday Burnham urged people to “vote to change politics” and said he would take the “fight as high as I can possibly take it”.

But, despite the seat being considered one of Labour’s safest (it has been red since its creation in 1983), the governing party face a stiff challenge in the shape of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.

Although the Reform candidate Robert Kenyon’s campaign has been bogged down with the revelation of historic sexist social media post and, shall we say, less than impressive media performances under scrutiny, pollsters have the contest a close run thing.

It comes as Starmer on Wednesday said he was willing to offer the mayor of Greater Manchester a “big” job in his government, should Burnham win when Thursday’s votes are counted.

But allies of Burnham said he was not interested in the offer, insisting “the benefit Andy has is the wind of change for not having been associated with the government’s failings”.

Burnham and his allies are reported to be hoping for a “coronation” in which Starmer stands aside, rather than a leadership contest, which they believe would be damaging to the Labour party’s brand, according to the Times.

But the prime minister has repeatedly made it clear he has no intention of standing down and says that he will fight any challenge to his leadership.

What is certain is that the next 24 hours will prove to be a pivotal moment for this Labour government and, in particular, the prime minister.

Please be aware that the Guardian, like other news outlets, is not allowed to report details of campaigning or election issues while polls are still open today – they close at 10pm.

But you can follow our blog for all the latest in UK politics, as well as I am sure plenty of photos of dogs at polling stations. Because, let’s face it, that really is the true meaning of any British election.

Polanski cleared by ethics inquiry over council tax payment complaint

Zack Polanski has been cleared by an ethics inquiry looking into complaints that he did not pay council tax while living on a houseboat.

A report by the Greater London authority’s monitoring officer found that the circumstances of the Green party leader’s living arrangements were beyond its scope and he had therefore not breached the code of conduct for London assembly members.

The complaints from Labour and the Conservatives alleged that Polanski had breached the requirements of the ethics code because he had not paid council tax while living on a houseboat in east London from 2022.

Polanski, who previously apologised for the “unintentional mistake”, revealed in his evidence to the monitoring officer that it had still not been established whether any tax was due and that the site of the boat fell on the border of two local authorities. As part of the inquiry, he told the monitoring officer that he had “personal experience of financial hardship and housing insecurity”.

He previously said he had not been living at the marina full-time but at another address as a lodger, before it emerged that he had occupied the boat for a couple of years before moving to a house.

In his witness statement, Polanski he said he had never had any intention to “evade council tax, avoid legal obligations or obtain any improper financial advantage” and it remained unclear whether he had actually failed to pay the proper tax.

“Any failure to appreciate the position arose solely from a misunderstanding of what was required in relation to an unusual and unconventional living arrangement,” he wrote.

A voter speaks to a police officer, as St Bernard dog called Indie waits, at a polling station:

The government’s annual accounts have been discounted by the National Audit Office for the third year in a row due to the amount of unaudited accounts from local councils.

For years, there has been a huge backlog in councils getting their accounts audited, which has meant the true financial health of local authorities has been obscured at a time when some have fallen into financial ruin.

The government has already legislated to tackle the local audit crisis via the English Devolution Bill, which will create a new Local Audit Office this autumn. But it remains unclear how long it will take to clear the backlog.

More councils have provided accounts than in recent years, which means there is less missing data in the 2024/25 Whole Government Accounts. But there were still 280 local authorities whose accounts were unaudited or subject to a disclaimed opinion from their external auditor, meaning we can’t be sure of the accuracy of the data.

Gareth Davies, head of the NAO said:

Recent measures to begin to restore normal audit assurance for English local authorities are welcome.

This work must be progressed with vigour to ensure timely and high-quality financial reporting for every local body, supporting their accountability to local people and providing more reliable whole of government accounts.

Rachel Reeves has warned her Labour colleagues not to “deviate” from her fiscal rules as the party braces for a leadership race that could begin within days.

Speaking at the Times CEO Summit in London on Thursday, the chancellor said Labour should stick to its manifesto commitments on economic stability and insisted she plans to carry on in her job, PA reported.

In a message to potential leadership challengers, she said:

We got elected on the promise to return stability to the economy, and anyone who wanted to deviate from that will not be fulfilling the manifesto commitments.

She was speaking as voters headed to polling stations across Makerfield in a contest that could see Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham return to Westminster and challenge Keir Starmer for the leadership of the Labour party.

Voters in two Scottish constituencies – Aberdeen South and Arbroath and Broughty Ferry – are busy today too, after their sitting MPs quit Westminster following their election in May to the Scottish parliament.

Recently-introduced legislation in Scotland bars MPs and councillors from sitting at the same time in Holyrood, so after the Scottish National party MPs Stephen Flynn and Stephen Gethins won constituency seats for Holyrood six weeks ago, their Commons seats became vacant.

The battle in Aberdeen South to succeed Flynn, previously the SNP’s Westminster leader, who left a 3,758 majority, is proving the most interesting by far.

The Scottish Conservatives argue they have a good chance of winning, based on recent local performances and past precedent, and are battling hard to defeat the SNP in its heartland by taking a very maximalist line on extracting every barrel of North Sea oil and gas.

A former Tory council co-leader, and current MSP Douglas Lumsden is taking on the equally experienced SNP candidate Richard Thomson, a former Aberdeenshire council leader who lost his previous Westminster seat of Gordon in the 2024 general election.

If the Tories did it pull off, and the bookies think they will fail, it would be a significant coup for the Tory leader Kemi Badenoch and deeply embarrassing for John Swinney, the SNP leader and first minister.

It would be read as evidence the Tories’ backing for North Sea oil is popular and that the furore over the £400,000 theft of SNP funds by its former chief executive, Peter Murrell, has damaged the SNP brand.

Arbroath and Broughty Ferry, a seat just to the east of Dundee, is seen as an SNP hold, even though Gethins held it in 2024 with less than 900 votes chiefly because Labour support has collapsed since the general election.

Nigel Farage has been trying to block a Bank of England cryptocurrency plan that could be costly for the billionaire bankrolling his party.

The Reform UK leader has said Christopher Harborne wants nothing in exchange for the millions he has donated to the party and the undeclared £5m personal gift to Farage that the Guardian revealed in April.

But Farage used a private meeting at the Bank to urge the governor to drop plans for a state-run alternative to the digital currency that has made his Thailand-based benefactor one of the richest people in the world.

Farage’s opposition to the proposal for a “Britcoin” is so strong that, after the meeting last September, he told an audience of crypto enthusiasts he would be “prepared to go to prison” to stop it, footage of the event shows.

Harborne’s £25m in donations to Farage’s Reform UK , formerly the Brexit party, account for about two-thirds of its funding. He is one of a handful of tech figures who own Tether, the company that issues the world’s most widely traded cryptocurrency.

Tether’s digital cash, known as stablecoins, is pegged in value to government-issued currencies, allowing users to exchange their money easily between the two. Registered in El Salvador with a small staff, Tether’s reported profits have surpassed those of Netflix and Coca-Cola.

If Harborne’s share of the profits is equal to his 12% stake, that would give him about £1bn a year. Those profits could fall, however, if the Bank’s governor, Andrew Bailey, proceeds with the Britcoin plan, which could cut demand for stablecoins such as Tether’s, according to a submission to the central bank by an industry body that represents the company.

Some live photographs of Andy Burnham on the campaign trail today:

Brexit has depressed UK exports to the EU by 12%, and rejoining the customs union would undo only a fraction of the damage, research shared with the Guardian shows.

With the UK’s future relationship with the bloc likely to feature prominently in a potential Labour leadership contest, the economists John Springford and Anton Spisak, of the Centre for European Reform, provide fresh evidence of the damage caused by exiting.

A decade on from the referendum, they have found that services sector exports to the EU are 7% lower than they would have been if the UK had remained in the EU, and goods exports are 16% lower.

Using detailed trade data and economic modelling, they show that the “overwhelming majority” of the impact – 10% of the total 12% decline in exports – is accounted for by leaving the single market.

“The regulatory costs related to Brexit – such as new certification procedures and checks for compliance with EU standards – have had a much more significant impact on UK-EU trade than customs-related barriers,” they say.

The hardest-hit sectors have been travel, finance and insurance, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, and agrifood.

The estimate of lost services exports is larger than previous research has suggested, because the authors take into account a significant uptick in services trade within the EU since the Covid pandemic that the UK has missed out on.

The trial of two Russian-linked arsonists who targeted property connected to Keir Starmer shows that the UK is under attack from bad actors who want to “exploit division” and “destabilise our democracy”, the prime minister has said.

Roman Lavrynovych, 22, from Ukraine, and Stanislav Carpiuc, 27, from Romania, were found guilty on Monday of conspiring to carry out arson attacks on property linked to the prime minister, and appear to have operated under the instruction of an online handler with links to Russia.

Speaking at the G7 in Évian-les-Bains, France, on Wednesday, Starmer said the attack on the house had “clearly impacted and affected my family”.

Lavrynovych and Carpiuc will be sentenced on Friday. Their co-defendant, Petro Pochynok, 35, was cleared. Lavrynovych was also convicted of damaging two properties by fire, being reckless as to whether life was endangered, on 11 and 12 May last year.

The sentencing comes during a period of heightened tension between Russia and the UK. On Sunday a Russian shadow fleet vessel containing 98,000 tonnes of oil was intercepted by British troops in the Channel, and on Tuesday a Russian warship fired warning shots at a British-flagged yacht.

Starmer said the warning shots were “deeply concerning and reckless”, and said the UK was dealing with proxy attacks from Russia “every single day”.

US defence secretary urges UK to spend more on defence, ‘step up and do even more’

US defence secretary Pete Hegseth has offered his view on the relationship with the UK, after meeting Britain’s new defence minister Dan Jarvis.

His predecessor resigned in protest against low government spending on defence.

Hegseth said it was “a good meeting,” stressing that “the US-British defence alliance is an important one.”

He praised Jarvis for having first-hand experience of serving in a combat zone.

But he said “the message was the same: hey, we need you guys to step up and do even more, spend even more.”

He added:

If we need access and basing, whether it’s in the UK or say at Diego Garcia, we can’t live in a world where other countries are standing at the end of a runway with a clipboard trying to decide what flies and what doesn’t. It’s not gonna, it’s not gonna work for us. It’s not good in contingencies, and I don’t think it’s what he wants either.

He continued saying that “the more the UK spends on defence, the stronger Nato is going to be, the stronger western civilization is, and that’s a good thing.”

“I think [it was] a good start to a relationship that we need to renew even more,” Hegseth said.

Meanwhile, Wes Streeting has said his plan to ban “private equity sharks” from the social care sector was removed from the Labour manifesto, as he accused the government of “overcautiousness” in reforming the industry.

In a Fabian Society report on how to create a national care service, Streeting said overhauling social care was “one of the defining challenges of our age” but an “absence of good political leadership” was holding back change.

“In opposition, social care became a victim of our overcautiousness, which prohibited policy ideas from being floated for fear of what the Tories might say,” he said. “My plan to boot private equity sharks out of social care was cut from the manifesto, as was a proposal for a royal commission. The same culture continued into government.”

The private equity policy was first announced in 2022 and would have banned firms that failed to meet national standards in care, workers’ rights and financial sustainability.

A Labour source said Keir Starmer’s team took the policy out of the manifesto because they were worried it looked “anti-business”.

Why is there so much interest in a byelection in north-west England?

An election that could shape the future of UK politics for years to come is taking place on Thursday. But it is only happening in one small part of north-west England, with little more than 70,000 people eligible to vote.

Why? It is a question with a number of answers, some connected to the structure of the British political system, others much more topical.

Voters in Makerfield, a largely suburban constituency on the edge of Wigan, Greater Manchester , are choosing a new MP after the incumbent stood down. The candidate for the ruling Labour party and favourite to win, Andy Burnham, is the mayor of Greater Manchester and a former MP.

If Burnham wins, it is widely assumed that he will launch a campaign to unseat Keir Starmer as Labour leader and thus UK prime minister, or persuade Starmer to stand down. If things go as expected, the UK could have its seventh prime minister since 2017 in just a few weeks or months.

Read our full explainer here:

How quickly could Andy Burnham become the UK’s prime minister?

Those who don’t pay much attention to politics could be forgiven for not being fully on top of this, but the UK could have a new prime minister soon – potentially within weeks.

So how quickly could Andy Burnham replace Keir Starmer, if Burnham wins Thursday’s Makerfield byelection ? Actually, quite quickly, but only if events go in a particular way. And there are plenty of alternate outcomes.

The Labour party rulebook sets out that if an MP wants to challenge a sitting party leader, they must first be nominated by at least 20% of the parliamentary party (currently 81 MPs), as well as by at least 5% of all local branches or at least three party-affiliated groups, of which a minimum of two must be unions.

Any contenders who meet the threshold go forward to a vote of party members, assuming there is more than one challenger.

It also says that if a sitting leader is challenged, they do not need to meet these requirements and are automatically in the members’ vote – if they choose to do so.

There is a scenario in which Burnham is elected as Makerfield’s MP, Starmer decides he will step down immediately – perhaps after a mass of senior cabinet ministers tell him they will resign if he does not – and no other challengers come forward.

Dogs stun as owners head to the polls in Makerfield byelection

In our opening post, I did promise you some dogs at polling stations.

And reader, pictures of our four-legged friends exercising their democratic right have been flooding in from the various news agencies.

Here are the highlights so far:

Stay tuned for more dogs, more polling stations and more pictures of both as the day rolls on.

Burnham team tell ministers to delay resignations to avoid chaos

Andy Burnham’s campaign has been forced to talk ministers out of resigning as early as this weekend to avoid Keir Starmer’s government descending into chaos amid fallout from the Makerfield byelection , the Guardian can reveal.

As they prepare for a potential change of leader in the event he beats Reform on Thursday, Burnham’s team is increasingly concerned a rapid collapse of Starmer’s administration would mean further instability for the country.

Senior campaign figures believe Starmer should be given time to set out a timetable for his departure, with Burnham not planning to announce any challenge in the immediate aftermath of the result.

However, some ministers are “trigger happy” and have already proactively offered to quit, Burnham allies revealed, suggesting that several below cabinet level could resign over the coming days to try to pressurise Starmer.

“We’re trying to hold that back. We can’t have a Boris Johnson-style collapse. If they’re trying to force Keir’s hand with a kamikaze approach it will ultimately be counterproductive,” a senior campaign figure said.

The prime minister has insisted he will fight any challenge, believing he has a duty to the country, even though some of his closest allies predict the leadership crisis may reach a tipping point where he has no option but to stand down.

Starmer’s allies have discussed a “100m hurdles” strategy which involves throwing obstacles in Burnham’s way – such as the danger of losing the Manchester mayoralty, the fragile geopolitical situation and potentially a job offer .

Supporters of Burnham expect senior cabinet ministers to tell the prime minister over the weekend to agree to a handover of power, rather than fighting a bitter leadership contest that could stretch on for months.

Labour campaigners fear hordes of MPs may annoy public as Makerfield votes

Up to 3,000 Labour campaigners are expected to descend on Makerfield for Andy Burnham , prompting fears among organisers that the hordes of activists may end up overwhelming voters during Thursday’s byelection.

Local hotels are fully booked and party members are expected to be dispatched to polling stations, and to leaflet people waiting at bus stops and school gates to avoid swamping residents on their doorsteps.

Cabinet ministers are among the MPs who are expected to spend the day in the Greater Manchester constituency, where Burnham is seeking to defeat Reform UK’s Robert Kenyon.

“There is only so many times we can knock on doors on polling day without people getting too annoyed,” one MP said.

Backers of Burnham are expected to use the sheer numbers of activists and MPs doorstepping in Makerfield as proof that the mayor of Greater Manchester can re-energise the party to beat Reform UK – where the momentum will be crucial for him to then seek to immediately replace Keir Starmer as prime minister.

Some MPs and ministers arriving to campaign in the constituency over the past week are said to have sometimes been taken aback that there is little public-facing for them to do apart from dispatching leaflets through letterboxes. “There were just too many of them,” one said.

The campaign estimates that the number of volunteers – including hundreds of MPs – has meant each door in the constituency has been knocked at least six or seven times.

Reform UK’s candidate Robert Kenyon has visited St Aidan’s Parish Centre in Wigan, accompanied by party leader Nigel Farage, to cast his vote in today’s byelection.

Kenyon was pictured wearing a replica England shirt (looks like Italia 90 to me, most closely associated with Gazza blubbing at the end of a hard-fought contest…), following last night’s World Cup win for Thomas Tuchel’s men.

Polls open in Makerfield for historic byelection that could determine Keir Starmer’s future

Hello and welcome to the UK politics live blog.

The people of Makerfield, a constituency sitting just outside of Wigan, have at last begun voting in what could be one of the most consequential byelections in British political history.

Since Labour MP Josh Simons resigned to allow the mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham a clear run at returning to parliament – and the opportunity to become prime minister – residents have been inundated with party campaigners and reporters.

Yesterday Burnham urged people to “vote to change politics” and said he would take the “fight as high as I can possibly take it”.

But, despite the seat being considered one of Labour’s safest (it has been red since its creation in 1983), the governing party face a stiff challenge in the shape of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.

Although the Reform candidate Robert Kenyon’s campaign has been bogged down with the revelation of historic sexist social media post and, shall we say, less than impressive media performances under scrutiny, pollsters have the contest a close run thing.

It comes as Starmer on Wednesday said he was willing to offer the mayor of Greater Manchester a “big” job in his government, should Burnham win when Thursday’s votes are counted.

But allies of Burnham said he was not interested in the offer, insisting “the benefit Andy has is the wind of change for not having been associated with the government’s failings”.

Burnham and his allies are reported to be hoping for a “coronation” in which Starmer stands aside, rather than a leadership contest, which they believe would be damaging to the Labour party’s brand, according to the Times.

But the prime minister has repeatedly made it clear he has no intention of standing down and says that he will fight any challenge to his leadership.

What is certain is that the next 24 hours will prove to be a pivotal moment for this Labour government and, in particular, the prime minister.

Please be aware that the Guardian, like other news outlets, is not allowed to report details of campaigning or election issues while polls are still open today – they close at 10pm.

But you can follow our blog for all the latest in UK politics, as well as I am sure plenty of photos of dogs at polling stations. Because, let’s face it, that really is the true meaning of any British election.

Golden Boot: World Cup 2026 top goalscorers | World Cup 2026 | The Guardian

Keyword – Football
Trefwoorden – World Cup 2026, Football, World Cup, Sport, US sports, Australia sport, Mexico, Czechia, South Korea, South Africa football team, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Canada, Qatar, Switzerland, Brazil, Haiti football team, Morocco football team, Scotland, Australia, Paraguay, Turkey, USA, Curaçao, Ecuador, Germany, Côte d’Ivoire football team, Japan, Netherlands, Sweden, Tunisia football team, Belgium, Egypt football team, Iran, New Zealand, Cape Verde, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Uruguay, France, Iraq, Norway, Senegal football team, Algeria football team, Argentina, Austria, Jordan, Colombia, Democratic Republic of the Congo football team, Portugal, Uzbekistan, Croatia, England, Ghana football team, Panama
Title – Golden Boot: World Cup 2026 top goalscorers | World Cup 2026 | The Guardian
Author –
Link – Golden Boot: World Cup 2026 top goalscorers | World Cup 2026 | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-18T08:17:30.000Z
Category – Sport
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/football/ng-interactive/2026/jun/04/golden-boot-world-cup-2026-top-goalscorers-winner

The Golden Boot is awarded to the World Cup’s top goalscorer, with assists used as a tie-breaker if two or more players finish level. The 2026 tournament has three former Golden Boot winners taking part: Kylian Mbappé of France (eight goals in 2022), England’s Harry Kane (six goals in 2018) and James Rodríguez of Colombia (six goals in 2014).

Mbappé and Kane are among the pre-tournament favourites to finish top scorer in North America, alongside Norway’s Erling Haaland – making his World Cup debut – and Argentina’s Lionel Messi.

Other pre-tournament favourites include Spain’s Mikel Oyarzabal and Lamine Yamal, Vinícius Júnior of Brazil and Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo. However, history tells us not to discount a surprise package. Totò Schillaci, initially a back-up striker in Italy’s squad, won the Golden Boot in 1990, while Russia’s Oleg Salenko finished joint-top scorer in 1994, albeit aided by five goals in one game against Cameroon.

Golden Boot contenders have an extra match to rack up the goals in 2026, with a 48-team tournament meaning a round of 32 for the first time. Any team that reaches the semi-finals will finish the World Cup having played eight games, although the highest Golden Boot total ever – Just Fontaine’s 13 goals in six games for France in 1958 – remains an imposing target.

You can no longer have joint winners. If two or more players have the same number of goals and also of assists, the total minutes played in the final competition will be taken into account, with the player playing fewer minutes ranked first.

What is the ‘Deeply read’ list? | Information | The Guardian

Keyword – Info
Trefwoorden – Information
Title – What is the ‘Deeply read’ list? | Information | The Guardian
Author – Guardian staff
Link – What is the ‘Deeply read’ list? | Information | The Guardian
Publish date – 2024-02-28T09:45:16.000Z
Category – News
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/info/2024/feb/28/what-is-the-deeply-read-list

For many years at the Guardian we have been looking at how long our readers spend with our journalism. While the number of clicks on an article can help us understand the possible importance or popularity of an article on a given topic, it’s just as important for us to get a sense of the quality of a piece and the time readers spend with it can help us gauge that.

Along with many other sites, the Guardian has for a long time shown readers the pieces other people are clicking on in the form of a “Most viewed” list. But these lists often don’t include wonderful journalism on topics more off the beaten track. The “Deeply read” list uses attention time to surface a wider range of journalism that other readers are spending more time with. It appears on our regionalised home pages and reflects the interests of the region’s audience.

Not all of these pieces are long. To power the list we created a metric that looks at the attention time from readers compared with the length of the piece. This means that the list is diverse in terms of topic, length and format.

We hope you enjoy the increased variety and depth of the pieces you find here.

Inquest into Melbourne influencer’s death following freebirth halted after new phone evidence discovered | Health | The Guardian

Keyword – Australia news
Trefwoorden – Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia news, Pregnancy, Parents and parenting
Title – Inquest into Melbourne influencer’s death following freebirth halted after new phone evidence discovered | Health | The Guardian
Author – https://www.theguardian.com/profile/melissa-davey
Link – Inquest into Melbourne influencer’s death following freebirth halted after new phone evidence discovered | Health | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-18T05:51:29.000Z
Category – News
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2026/jun/18/freebirth-death-melbourne-influencer-phone-evidence-inquest-ntwnfb

The closing submissions in an inquest into the death of a woman who gave birth at home with no support from medically trained health workers has been delayed, after new evidence came to light after a forensic analysis of her mobile phone.

Stacey Warnecke, a 30 year-old nutritionist, died on 29 September in Frankston hospital in Melbourne .

Warnecke, a wellness influencer, had paid birthkeeper Emily Lal $6,000 to support her to give birth at home without any medically trained staff involved, in what is sometimes called a “freebirth”.

Birthkeepers have no medical training and operate outside of the medical system.

The court heard Warnecke suffered a massive postpartum haemorrhage after she delivered the placenta, with an ambulance called approximately half an hour after the bleed was first noticed. Warnecke told Lal and her husband, Nathan, that she was short of breath and needed to lie down after the bleed.

In her evidence on Tuesday, Lal told the inquest that although she had been paid to support Warnecke, her role was primarily that of a supportive friend, that she was not clinically trained, and that it was not her responsibility to make Warnecke’s birth safer, or to call an ambulance unless specifically asked.

She said she never gave Warnecke medical advice, and only shared her own experiences of freebirthing her own children.

Lal also told the inquest that she no longer had access to texts Warnecke sent to her alerting her that she had gone into labour on 26 September, or any texts after that.

“I got a new phone and lost everything,” Lal told the court. Counsel assisting the coroner, Rachel Ellyard, asked Lal when she lost her phone, with Lal replying, “October or November, I can’t remember”.

Lal added that she then mainly texted Warnecke’s husband, Nathan, before going to their home to support the birth.

Lal gave evidence on the condition that the coroner granted her protection against her answers being used against her in future civil or criminal proceedings.

The inquest had been due to close on Friday.

On Thursday afternoon, Ellyard told that coroner that the contents of a forensic analysis of Warnecke’s phone had been made available to the court.

“It seems to me that the contents that have been made available raise issues that are going to require some further investigation and perhaps the gathering of further evidence,” Ellyard said.

As a result, the court was adjourned to a date yet to be determined.

Addressing Warnecke’s family members, who were listening to the inquest online, coroner Therese McCarthy said “sometimes investigations… take a different course because new information comes to hand”.

“I take the view that this material is of such significance that the court must delay making any findings and hearing submissions until we’ve had an opportunity to undertake a proper analysis of that material, and potentially call for more evidence.”

Earlier on Thursday, expert medical witnesses Dr Mark Tarrant, an obstetrician and gynaecologist and Dr Catherine Adams, a midwife, gave evidence that they believed Warneck’s condition was treatable had either a midwife been present at the home birth, or had Warnecke given birth at a hospital.

Adams said that postpartum haemorrhage is common enough that it is always in a midwives’ minds as a possibility, and that they are always assessing factors throughout pregnancy and labour that might increase that risk, so that they are ready to quickly intervene. She said quick intervention makes the condition treatable.

A midwife would have had treatments ready in case of such a complication, she said. “We recognise once it starts, it can be quite catastrophic,” she said.

Adams said she believed within half an hour of the haemorrhage occurring and with no treatment administered, medical staff subsequently treating Warnecke had “lost the opportunity to control the situation”.

Soul classics and stepmother celebrations: Alicia Keys’ 20 best songs – ranked! | Alicia Keys | The Guardian

Keyword – Music
Trefwoorden – Alicia Keys, Pop and rock, Music, Culture
Title – Soul classics and stepmother celebrations: Alicia Keys’ 20 best songs – ranked! | Alicia Keys | The Guardian
Author – https://www.theguardian.com/profile/alexispetridis
Link – Soul classics and stepmother celebrations: Alicia Keys’ 20 best songs – ranked! | Alicia Keys | The Guardian
Publish date – 2026-06-18T13:15:03.000Z
Category – Culture
URL – https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/18/soul-classics-and-stepmother-celebrations-alicia-keys-20-best-songs-ranked

20. Skydive (Unlocked) (2021)

Two different takes on the same album – one traditional, the other more beat-heavy – packaged together, Keys was an experiment that didn’t quite work, but Skydive, co-written with Raphael Saadiq, is a fine song: both versions are great but Mike WiLL Made-It’s bumping rework wins by a fraction.

19. Jane Doe (2001)

A collaboration with former Xscape vocalist Kandi Burruss, Jane Doe is a splendidly sassy slice of early 00s get-your-hands-off-my-man R&B. In mood, if not exactly sound, you could file it next to the songs Burruss co-authored for TLC and Destiny’s Child: No Scrubs, Bills Bills Bills and Bug a Boo.

18. Wait Til You See My Smile (2009)

Shameless no-holds-barred 80s bombast – Billy Joel piano, booming drums, epic stadium rock synths – meets utterly infectious emotional uplift: on one level, Wait Til You See My Smile is completely ridiculous, but it is also irresistible, and Keys’ vocal, alternately sultry and ecstatic, is fantastic.

17. Love Looks Better (2020)

There is a distinct hint of EDM about the synths on Love Looks Better and the song, co-written by Ryan Tedder, is pure bright-hued pop. Clearly we’re a long way from the classic R&B of Keys’ debut, but her voice brings the soul, and it’s a churlish character indeed who doesn’t find themselves carried along with it.

16. Blended Family (What You Do for Love) (ft A$AP Rocky) (2016)

It is hard to think of many other pop songs about the pleasures of being a stepmother, or to think of any as sweetly affecting as this: charmingly plain-spoken lyrics (“even though I married your father / That’s not the only reason I’m here for ya”), killer sample from Edie Brickell’s What I Am, great guest verse by A$AP Rocky.

15. Dragon Days (2003)

You can, if you wish, view The Diary of Alicia Keys as a concept album about the ups and downs of its author’s romantic life. Dragon Days, which crops up halfway through, captures her very much on the upswing: her voice is a breathy growl, the music is impressively tough funk.

14. Fire We Make (ft Maxwell) (2012)

Fire We Make couldn’t be more straightforward: an old-fashioned, understated slow jam, decorated with horns and an impressively dextrous guitar solo. But who needs gimmicks when a song’s this good, and moreover features Maxwell in falsetto lover-man mode?

13. A Woman’s Worth (2005)

Originally a string-laden ballad from her debut album Songs in A Minor, A Woman’s Worth sounds best on the live Unplugged album: more urgent, stripped back to drums, bass, piano and guitar, bolstered by an audience audibly in raptures throughout.

12. Doesn’t Mean Anything (2009)

The first single from The Element of Freedom, Keys’ fourth album, was released to tepid reviews: the main criticism was that it was too unadventurous, but you could just as easily paint it as the distilled essence of what Keys does: an unflashy but superbly written song, piano driven, mid-tempo, beautifully sung, job done.

11. Diary (ft Tony! Toni! Toné! and Jermaine Paul) (2003)

Diary is all about the slow burn, its gradual shift from intimacy to intensity. The lyrics are about a relationship seemingly being conducted in secret, but by the end of the song, things appear to be fraying – a climax amped up by the appearance of Tony! Toni! Toné!

10. Empire State of Mind Part II (Broken Down) (2009)

You might expect Keys’ solo piano interpretation of the 21st century’s answer to New York, New York to be more melancholic than the swaggering Jay-Z version: it keeps the monster chorus, but if anything, it’s more romantic and glossy, closer to a show tune. It’s still a fantastic song.

9. Like You’ll Never See Me Again (2007)

Keys covered Prince’s How Come You Don’t Call Me on her debut album and his influence audibly lurks around Like You’ll Never See Me Again, a beautiful, falsetto-heavy ballad. But it’s not just that it sounds like Prince, it’s that you could definitely imagine him singing it, which counts as high praise indeed.

8. Try Sleeping With a Broken Heart (2009)

Keys’ album The Element of Freedom suggested a major musical shift, the 70s soul influences displaced by inspiration from 80s pop. Try Sleeping With a Broken Heart is the leading example: a thunderous old-skool hip-hop beat, equally immense synths, and, most importantly, a superb pop song at its core.

7. Karma (2003)

Keys trained as a classical pianist – she studied the Suzuki method and is a fan of Chopin. Perhaps that background seeped into the sound of Karma, which splits the difference between the kind of high-drama strings popular in early 00s hip-hop and a more complex, rococo arrangement.

6. Underdog (2020)

Co-written by Ed Sheeran and his regular collaborator Amy Wadge, the never-give-up mood of Underdog took on a fresh potency when Covid was declared a pandemic two months after the song’s release. But you don’t need to be in the middle of a global catastrophe to appreciate its infectiously breezy sound and hopeful message.

5. No One (2007)

The first single and the standout track from Keys’ third album, As I Am, No One boasts possibly the single best vocal performance the singer has ever captured in the studio: no fireworks, just pure wrenching emotion from the opening note. Plus, the chorus is amazing.

4. Un-thinkable (I’m Ready) (remix ft Drake) (2010)

The original is great, but it’s the Drake remix – recorded at the height of his initial purple patch – that you really want to hear. It is dreamier and more overcast in tone, which perfectly fits the subject matter: teetering on the verge of romantic commitment in your late 20s.

3. You Don’t Know My Name (2003)

The pillowy sound of 70s soft soul given a wonderful 21st-century reboot – the sample comes from the Main Ingredient’s 1975 album track Let Me Prove My Love to You – You Don’t Know My Name is lush and heady: the whole track sounds dizzy with unrequited love.

2. Fallin’ (2001)

Fallin’ was Keys’ breakthrough, but it came after a number of false starts: a 90s major-label deal went nowhere. It is tempting to suggest you can hear her sensing that this might be her last chance in the forcefulness of her vocal: certainly, it is an extraordinarily powerful introduction to her work.

1. If I Ain’t Got You (2003)

Ostensibly a love song, but actually inspired by the death of Aaliyah and the 9/11 attacks that took place a few weeks after the singer’s passing, If I Ain’t Got You is Alicia Keys’ most popular song – more than 1.5bn streams on Spotify alone – for a reason: beautifully played and sung, it is the perfect summation of Keys’ ability to come up with a timeless classic soul song that sounds entirely modern, rather than retro. Pub quiz fact: she nearly gave it away to Christina Aguilera, believing “I’ll write a hundred more like that”, until her A&R convinced her not to.