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Football club owners in court on rape charges
Maldon & Tiptree owners Barrie Drewitt-Barlow and his husband Scott are remanded in custody.
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Badenoch claims Tories ‘coming back’ despite widespread losses in local elections | Conservatives
Kemi Badenoch has claimed that the Conservatives are “coming back” after winning back Westminster and Wandsworth councils from Labour in London, despite her party suffering significant losses throughout England in Thursday’s elections.
The party also saw off a threat from Reform in Bexley. But the Tories suffered a series of losses in Essex, where Badenoch herself is an MP, losing 13 seats while Reform gained 52. It held on to Harlow, securing all 11 district council seats available.
In Havering, where the Conservatives had 14 councillors before the election, the party was wiped out. With Reform making up 39 of Havering’s 55 councillors, the Havering Residents’ Association was pushed into second place as the official opposition with 11 councillors, while Labour held on to two of four seats with three independents.
Reform also made gains at the Tories’ expense in Suffolk, winning eight of the 12 available Suffolk county council seats, and in places like Brentwood and North East Lincolnshire. A further blow came in Hampshire, where the party lost control of the council for the first time since 1997 while pressure has also rained down on the party from Farage’s party in Norfolk.
In Staffordshire, the Conservatives lost control of Newcastle-under-Lyme borough council, increasing its number of seats from one to a majority of 27, while the Conservatives fell from 26 seats to 15.
Speaking to party activists in Westminster, Badenoch said that the local result was proof that “Conservatives are coming back” and said her party had achieved “great results”.
“We have done brilliantly in Westminster,” she said. “We have taken back Wandsworth. People said nobody even expected anything to happen in Wandsworth. Wandsworth is now under Conservative control.
“Look at Fareham where Reform said they were going to be marching through. Conservative hold. We were told we were going to be wiped out in Bexley. What happened in Bexley? Conservative hold. And our councillors there have actually increased their majorities? The Conservatives are coming back.”
Both the Conservatives and Labour have performed better in London than in the rest of the country, emphasising the unique political landscape in the capital, said Prof Tony Travers, a local government expert at the London School of Economics. “The Tories have done surprisingly well, hanging on to Bexley, winning back Westminster and becoming the biggest party in Wandsworth,” he said, adding that a relatively strong showing from Labour and the Liberal Democrats in the capital suggested London voters were looking for less radical change than in other places in the country.
The political analyst Peter Kellner, the former president of YouGov, said it might be more accurate to say the Conservatives had done better than its last outing in local elections last year, when the Conservatives were defending 996 seats and lost 675, a loss rate of 68%. By early evening on Friday that rate had fallen to around 44%.
“The Conservatives are way behind Reform, but compared with last year this is not a disaster,” he said. “If you compare it to historical standards or when the Conservatives were in power, it’s awful – but compared with last year, they’re doing slightly better and Reform are doing slightly worse.”
Henry Hill, a political commentator and long-time Conservative party watcher, said there was a danger that big ticket gains such as Westminster risked masking a deeper problem for the Conservatives. “It could have been worse, this isn’t as bad as last year – but that is a low benchmark,” he said. “But the Conservatives are still going backwards at a time when the government is spectacularly unpopular and its councillor base is being eviscerated – that is a bad position for any political party to be in.”
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Virginia supreme court blocks state’s new congressional map in blow to Democrats ahead of midterms – live | US voting rights
Virginia supreme court strikes down new congressional map
In a blow to national and state Democrats, the Virginia supreme court struck down a constitutional amendment, approved by voters last month that re-drew the state’s congressional districts.
The top court ruled that Virginia’s Democratic-majority legislature did not follow proper procedure in approving the referendum before it was put before voters.
The new map would have likely flipped four Republican seats blue in the upcoming midterm elections, and given Democrats a 10-1 advantage for Virginia’s congressional delegation.
Stay tuned for more on the decision.
Key events
Richard Luscombe
The White House has branded Star Wars actor Mark Hamill “a sick individual” after an AI-generated image showing Donald Trump in a shallow grave, with the words “If Only” as an overlay was posted to one of star’s social media accounts.
Hamill, who played the lead character of Luke Skywalker in six movies of the iconic science fiction franchise and is a longtime critic of the US president, apologized and removed the post from his Bluesky account on Thursday.
The American actor replaced it with another message clarifying that he was not advocating the president’s demise.
“Actually, I was wishing him the opposite of dead, but apologize if you found the image inappropriate,” Hamill wrote, adding that Trump “should live long enough to be held accountable for his crimes”.
The White House, through its Rapid Response 47 account on X, immediately seized on Hamill’s original post, which portrayed the president lying beneath a gravestone inscribed with “Donald J Trump, 1946-2024”.
“Mark Hamill is one sick individual,” the post said. “These Radical Left lunatics just can’t help themselves. This kind of rhetoric is exactly what has inspired three assassination attempts in two years against our President.”
Read the full report:
A reminder that my colleagues are covering the latest on the conflict in the Middle East. Including secretary of state Marco Rubio’s visit to Rome, to mend strained relations with Italian leaders and the Vatican after Donald Trump chided Pope Leo XIV for his stance on the war in Iran.
Rubio told reporters in Rome that the US should get a response on Friday from Iran to its proposal to end the war.
“We’ll see what the response entails. The hope is it’s something that can put us into a serious process of negotiation,” Rubio said
Gaya Gupta
Economists projected about 55,000 new jobs and a 4.3% unemployment rate. A day earlier, the labor department announced 200,000 people filed for weekly unemployment benefits, a slight increase from the week before.
A series of major changes over the last year – tariffs, government layoffs, changing immigration policies and, now, rising oil prices amid conflict in the Middle East – have rattled the US economy and destabilized the labor market.
The new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics also included revisions to previous job figures. Last month, employers added 185,000 jobs, first reported as 178,000. This exceeded economists’ expectations of about 70,000. But in February, the US lost 156,000 jobs – initially reported as a drop of 92,000 jobs – an unexpected and major contraction just before the US-Israel war in Iran.
115,000 jobs added in April according to latest data
New data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) shows that the US economy added 115,000 jobs in April, down from the 178,000 initially reported in March, which came after a notable contraction the month prior.
Unemployment in April remained unchanged at 4.3%.
Donald Trump will begin his day in Washington. We can expect to hear from the president at 12pm ET, when he delivers remarks in the Rose Garden. We’ll bring you the latest lines as that gets under way.
Later, Trump will travel to Sterling, Virginia for a dinner for the men’s professional golf tour, LIV.
Trump administration arrested the parents of at least 27,000 kids in seven months
A Guardian analysis of government records has found that, during the first seven months of Donald Trump’s presidency, the administration arrested the parents of at least 27,000 children.
During this period in 2025, the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) was deporting about twice as many parents each month compared with 2024.
The records do not detail how many of these children were detained or deported with their parents, and how many families were split up. But the data provides one of the starkest views yet of how Trump’s mass deportation scheme has affected parents and children.
In thousands of cases, DHS sought to deport parents who had a different citizenship or nationality than their children, creating major legal and logistical barriers to keeping families together. You can read more of the investigation by my colleagues, Maanvi Singh and Will Craft, here:
US to start revoking passports of parents who owe more than $2,500 in child support
The US state department has said it will begin to revoke the passports of Americans who owe more than $2,500 in child support payments.
The revocations would begin on Friday and be focused on those who owe $100,000 or more, or about 2,700 American passport holders, the Associated Press reported.
In a statement, the state department said that the revocation of passports “supports the welfare of American children by exacting real consequences for child support delinquency under existing federal law.” It added:
Any American with significant child support debt should arrange payment to the relevant state or states now to prevent passport revocation. Once a passport is revoked, it may no longer be used for travel. Eligibility for a new passport will only be restored after child support debt is paid to the relevant state child support enforcement agency and the individual is no longer delinquent according to HHS records.
Passport revocations for unpaid child support of over $2,500 is permitted within a rarely used provision in Bill Clinton’s Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act law (1996), which tied benefits to work under reforms that have been criticised for driving up the numbers of people living in deep poverty. When the provision in the law has been applied it is typically focused on preventing people with child support debt from renewing or applying for a new passport.
Meanwhile, Alabama has asked federal judges to lift an order requiring the state to have a second district where Black voters are the majority or close to it. That district gave rise to the election of Rep. Shomari Figures, a Black Democrat, in 2024.
Republicans instead want to put in place a map lawmakers drew in 2023 – which was rejected by a federal court – that could allow them to reclaim Figures’ district.
Black residents currently make up about 48% of the district’s voting-age population, according to the Associated Press.
That would drop to about 39% under the 2023 map. Republicans hope the federal courts will see the case differently in the wake of the supreme court’s Louisiana decision, which found that the Louisiana district represented by Democrat Cleo Fields relied too heavily on race (more on this ruling in the next post)
Here are some details about the seismic impact last week’s US supreme court ruling will have on the voting power of racial minorities going forward, courtesy of my colleague Sam Levine:
The US supreme court ruled that Louisiana will have to redraw its congressional map, in a landmark decision that effectively guts a major section of the Voting Rights Act.
In a 6-3 decision along partisan lines, the court rendered ineffective section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the last remaining powerful provision of the 1965 civil rights law that prevents racial discrimination in voting. Section 2 has long been used to ensure minority voters are treated fairly in redistricting.
“Allowing race to play any part in government decision-making represents a departure from the constitutional rule that applies in almost every other context,” Justice Samuel Alito, a conservative, wrote for the majority opinion. “Compliance with section 2 thus could not justify the state’s use of race-based redistricting here. The state’s attempt to satisfy the middle district’s ruling, although understandable, was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander.”
The court’s decision is a major upheaval in US civil rights law and gives lawmakers permission to draw districting plans that weaken the influence of Black and other minority voters.
Asked by reporters on Wednesday whether states should redraw their congressional maps in response to the ruling, Donald Trump said: “I would.” In a dissenting opinion, Justice Elena Kagan wrote the court had now accomplished a “demolition of the Voting Rights Act”. You can read more here:
At the Tennessee state capitol, there were a number of protests against the legislature’s move to redraw the state’s congressional map that carved up the state’s majority-Black and sole Democratic district. Here are a selection of pictures that have been sent to us over the newswires:
Anger mounts after Tennessee Republicans redraw maps to erase last Democratic, Black-majority district
Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of US politics. Tennessee’s Republican-dominated legislature passed redistricting maps on Thursday, eliminating the state’s one Democratic, Black-majority congressional district as GOP lawmakers scramble to improve their fortunes ahead of the November midterms.
The new map splits Shelby County, the home of Memphis, a majority-Black city that played a critical role in the civil rights movement, into three separate Republican-leaning districts.
The majority-Black district being eliminated in the Memphis area has long been represented by Rep. Steve Cohen, the state’s lone Democratic congressional representative. All nine of Tennessee’s congressional districts are now Republican-leaning.
Republican House Speaker Cameron Sexton claimed that the new districts were drawn based on population and politics, not racial data.
Demonstrators protest inside the Tennessee state Capitol on 7 May 2026. Photograph: Seth Herald/Reuters
But Democrats dismissed these claims and have argued that dividing up Memphis effectively deprives the Black community of representation in Congress.
“These maps are racist tools of white supremacy at the behest of the most powerful white supremacist in the United States of America, Donald J. Trump,” said state Rep. Justin Pearson, a Black Democrat from Memphis who is running for the US House.
Democrats say the redistricting effort, which prompted fierce protests, was a cynical attack on the hard-fought gains for equal representation won in the civil rights movement in a state that was forged by slavery and segregation.
The redraw comes as Republican-led southern states scramble to enact new maps in the wake of last week’s landmark Callais v Landry decision supreme court ruling, which invalidated swaths of the Voting Rights Act which had restrained state governments from drawing congressional districts that left Black voters at a political disadvantage.
Republicans in Louisiana, Alabama and South Carolina also have taken steps toward redistricting. Republican Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, is reportedly due to sign the map into law imminently.
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Man jailed for murder of father-of-nine has conviction quashed
Sean Rodgers, 38, was sentenced to a minimum of 18 years for the murder of Edward Meenan in Londonderry in 2018.
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