Lando Norris: ‘You don’t have to have a killer instinct to be world champion’
Emails reveal extent of peer’s role in asking minister to commercial event in parliament
New documents reveal the extent of a Labour peer’s involvement in organising the attendance of a minister at a commercial event in parliament.Emails show how David Evans contacted officials working closely with Sharon Taylor, a housing minister in the House of Lords, who was to be the keynote speaker at an event on housing that Lord Evans of Watford was hosting in parliament.Evans is under formal investigation by the House of Lords watchdog after a series of Guardian stories revealed his involvement in an apparent cash-for-access venture. He hosted commercial events in parliament, similar to the one to which he invited Taylor, on behalf of his son Richard’s company, which was charging up to £25,000 for sponsorship of the events. Evans owns a one-third shareholding in the business
Shabana Mahmood: lord chancellor with political nous unafraid to shake up system
Shabana Mahmood’s potential as a future cabinet minister was first noticed by the former deputy Labour leader Tom Watson in the 90s over tea and samosas at her family’s end-of-terrace Birmingham home.Watson, a seasoned fixer, had become a close friend of her father, Mahmood Ahmed, the chair of Birmingham Labour party. When political problems arose, Watson and fellow Labour party organisers would be guided through to comfy sofas in the family sitting room.He said the group, nearly all middle-aged men, would “start babbling” about the latest ructions and discuss how to negotiate multilayered West Midlands politics involving factions and complex community alliances.Inevitably, Ahmed would turn towards his daughter, who had appeared with a fresh pot of tea
UK politics: Starmer warns Trump’s US tariffs not just ‘short-term tactical exercise’ – as it happened
Some commentators have assumed that President Trump is just using tariffs as a negotiating ploy. Given that he has announced tariffs on Canada and Mexico, only to cancel them very quickly, there is a theory that he is doing the same thing again, only on a global scale. Alternatively, there is a view that a prolonged, negative reaction – falling share prices, rising inflation, higher unemployment? – could lead him to change his mind quite soon.During the Q&A at the Labour local elections campaign launch earlier, Keir Starmer in effect rejected all these theories. He said that what Trump was doing was the start of “a new era”
After Doge come Doze and Dope | Brief letters
Two further UK government departments to add to the list, the first of which appears to be in operation already: Doze (the Department of Zero Effort) for managing communications and Dope (the Department of Preconceived Expectations) for managing disillusioned MPs.Dr Anthony IsaacsLondon In terms of art therapy, half an hour spent in the Rothko room at Tate Modern at least once a year has done wonders for my mental health (Take two Van Goghs daily: the growing popularity of museum prescriptions, 31 March).Peter de VoilKing’s Cliffe, Northamptonshire In responding to Nels Abbey’s article about racial slurs and hate crime, your letter writer is right to note that “many lesbian and gay men object to being called ‘queer’” (30 March). I would add that many of us bisexuals object to it too.Ria HopkinsonHolloway, London I do so hope that the story about a coffee-cup-shaped bag was an April fool (Letters, 1 April)
Labour tries to seem in control while The Donald unleashes chaos on the world | John Crace
With characteristic humility and good grace … Hardly.Shortly after 9pm UK time on Wednesday, the Sun-Bed King made his way to the White House Rose Garden, looking every bit the dishonest bookie as he held up a board with every country’s separate tariff. He might as well have been signposting the odds on a global recession.No country went untouched. The penguins, the sole inhabitants of Heard Island near Antarctica, are in for a hell of a shock the next time they try to flog some frozen fish to the USA
Keir Starmer accuses Reform UK of ‘fawning over Putin’
Keir Starmer has accused Reform UK of “fawning over Putin” as the prime minister used the launch of Labour’s local election campaign to attack Nigel Farage repeatedly over his past comments about the Russian leader.With Labour viewing Reform as potentially its greatest rival in next month’s elections, Starmer devoted more time to attacking the rightwing populist party than criticising the Conservatives.Labour chose an area of Derbyshire with a reputation for having the worst pothole problem in England as the location for the launch, in which Starmer accused the Conservative-controlled Derbyshire county council of being responsible for the poor state of the roads and anti-social behaviour. The council is a key Labour target.However, the prime minister devoted most of his political attack lines to Reform, zeroing in on a number of areas on which Labour hopes Farage’s party is particularly vulnerable
China needs friends in Trump’s trade war. But Xi may have to go it alone
What are anti-dumping laws and why does Australia need them?
Australia’s social media ban is attracting global praise – but we’re no closer to knowing how it would work
TikTok ban deadline looms in US amid last-minute takeover bids
Grand National 2025: updates from Aintree – live
County Championship cricket day two: Essex v Surrey and more – live