Pro baseball player Tarik El-Abour is everything RFK Jr says he can’t be
British Steel halts redundancy plans after government rescue
British Steel will not continue with a consultation on making up to 2,700 steelworkers at its Scunthorpe plant redundant, after the government took control of the firm earlier this month.The Chinese company Jingye, which promised a “new chapter” when it bought British Steel in 2020, last month proposed closing Scunthorpe’s two blast furnaces, putting the roles under threat and ending Britain’s ability to produce steel from scratch.The UK government responded by recalling parliament to approve legislation granting ministers emergency powers to take control ofthe company and continue production at the site.British Steel confirmed on Tuesday that it had officially withdrawn redundancy consultation forms, formally bringing the process to an end.The decision comes after a frantic scramble at the highest level of government to secure a shipment of raw materials to feed the plant’s two furnaces, nicknamed Queen Anne and Queen Bess
Even Trump must know that firing the chair of the Fed would be self-defeating | Nils Pratley
US stock markets, Treasury bonds and the dollar itself are sliding amid the tariff turmoil and Donald Trump needs a soft target. It was probably only a matter of time before he intensified his attacks on Jerome Powell, chair of the US Federal Reserve. It is an easy narrative to blame the dull central banker with orthodox worries about anchoring inflation expectations. Nor is Powell able to engage in tit-for-tat soundbites. Unlike Trump, he must measure the impact on markets of his every word
Ofcom closes technical loophole used by criminals to intercept mobile calls and texts
The UK communications regulator Ofcom is banning mobile operators from leasing numbers that can be used by criminals to intercept and divert calls and messages, including security codes sent by banks to customers.Ofcom said it would stop the leasing of “global titles”, special types of phone numbers used by mobile networks to support services to make sure messages and calls reach the intended recipient.The regulator said until now global titles, which are used in the background of billions of calls and messages sent worldwide, could be leased out to third parties, providing a technical loophole whereby criminals could get hold of and intercept messages.Natalie Black, the director for networks and communications at Ofcom, said: “We are taking world-leading action to tackle the threat posed by criminals gaining access to mobile networks. Leased global titles are one of the most significant and persistent sources of malicious signalling
The US government is coming for Google and Meta – but what will happen next?
Hello, and welcome to TechScape. This week, Google and Meta take legal beatings while Microsoft faces a “tipping point” over Gaza.Google suffered another defeat last week in its clash with the Department of Justice, which has now won two separate cases arguing the company’s rise to power was aided by illegal and anticompetitive practices. The legal battles have placed the tech giant at the center of the government’s most significant antitrust action in decades, and left one of the world’s most valuable companies facing an uncertain future.A US federal judge in Virginia ruled on Thursday that Google had illegally built a monopoly over the online advertising industry, marking the company’s second major loss in an antitrust case in less than a year
Jack Draper backs Sinner as return from ban nears: ‘He doesn’t deserve any hate’
Jack Draper believes it has been important to stand up for his friend Jannik Sinner and that the Italian is undeserving of any hate as he prepares to return next month from his three‑month doping ban.“When people ask about him, or anyone, I’ll tell the truth,” Draper said, in a joint interview with the Guardian and the BBC. “I think Jannik is a really, really genuine, nice person. And on top of that, he’s obviously an unbelievable player. In this situation, I’m sure that he would have absolutely zero idea of anything
The Breakdown | Just for kicks, the top 10 rugby union sharp shooters of the past 30 years
It is approaching that time of year. Big games hinging on increasingly slim margins, the pressure on goal-kickers intense. Check out Marcus Smith’s conversion attempt after Cadan Murley’s try for Harlequins against Sale on Saturday. The ball struck the right post, the crossbar, the left post and then the crossbar again in a classic “What happened next?” moment that captured perfectly the agonies of the tortured marksman’s art.But the old maxim still holds true: goal-kickers don’t lose games, they win them
Rachel Roddy’s homage to Anna del Conte and Vincenzo Corrado’s fennel with pistachio, lemon and anchovy sauce | A kitchen in Rome
‘It was very difficult to hold on to’: are Michelin stars a blessing - or a curse?
From kumquats to lime caviar: UK foodies embrace a whole new world of citrus
Notes on chocolate: elegant treats for when the Easter eggs are gone
Dove, London: ‘inventive, unusual, tantalising’ – restaurant review
Mediterranean producers unite in the face of dire adversity