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Today — 27 June 2026Main stream

Ubuntu 26.10 Snapshot 2 is out (with a ‘breaking change’)

26 June 2026 at 14:52

Ubuntu logo behind stingray in the ocean.Ubuntu 26.10 Snapshot 2 is available to download, the second of four snapshots planned for the ‘Stonking Stingray’ development cycle ahead of a stable release in October. As with the first snapshot, there’s not a lot “new” stuff to see or test out, so unless you’re a developer or an avid bug hunter there’s little reason to rush off and try it. Canonical’s Utkarsh Gupta, announcing the release on Ubuntu’s developer mailing list, warns of a “breaking change” – don’t panic: it’s not in the image itself, but the URL it’s accessed from. Over the past few weeks the Ubuntu […]

You're reading Ubuntu 26.10 Snapshot 2 is out (with a ‘breaking change’), a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Ubuntu 26.10 Snapshot 2 is out (with a ‘breaking change’)

26 June 2026 at 14:52

Ubuntu logo behind stingray in the ocean.Ubuntu 26.10 Snapshot 2 is available to download, the second of four snapshots planned for the ‘Stonking Stingray’ development cycle ahead of a stable release in October. As with the first snapshot, there’s not a lot “new” stuff to see or test out, so unless you’re a developer or an avid bug hunter there’s little reason to rush off and try it. Canonical’s Utkarsh Gupta, announcing the release on Ubuntu’s developer mailing list, warns of a “breaking change” – don’t panic: it’s not in the image itself, but the URL it’s accessed from. Over the past few weeks the Ubuntu […]

You're reading Ubuntu 26.10 Snapshot 2 is out (with a ‘breaking change’), a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

The Edinburgh attacks and the question of ‘two-tier journalism’

Five people were injured in a series of violent attacks in Edinburgh last weekend. Footage circulating online appeared to show a bare-chested man carrying a large weapon through the streets, while another clip showed a man repeatedly battering the door of a local pizzeria. The incident reportedly began at Broomhouse Mosque, and police have since charged a man in connection with the attacks.

The violence prompted reaction from politicians and Muslim organisations, many of whom argued that the attack appeared to be motivated by anti-Muslim hatred. Keir Starmer condemned what he described as “anti-Muslim hatred,” while Muslim Engagement and Development (MEND) urged authorities to “treat this as what the evidence indicates: Islamophobic, far-right terror.”

“Whipping up this type of vigilantism and emboldening far-right terror is [the] whole point of this poisonous narrative,” the group said.

The government-funded British Muslim Trust likewise said it was “deeply concerned by the shocking attacks.”

Yet despite the severity of the incident, the story received relatively little prominence across the UK national press, an omission that did not go unnoticed.

Posting on Bluesky alongside an image of the morning newspaper front pages, journalist Adam Bienkov wrote:

“The attacks in Edinburgh, in which an armed bare-chested white man terrorised Muslims, leaving five people injured, don’t feature on a single newspaper front page this morning. Two tier journalism.”

Bienkov contrasted the muted coverage with the intense media attention given to violence in Belfast earlier this month. Following the stabbing of a man by a Sudanese refugee, graphic footage spread rapidly across social media. Tommy Robinson, posting from Moscow, shared the video with his two million followers on X within hours, claiming it showed an “invader trying to behead a man.” Elon Musk subsequently called on people to protest.

Anti-immigration activists in Northern Ireland quickly seized on the incident, circulating protest locations and, in some cases, sharing alleged “hit lists” of migrants’ homes and hostels. The following day, images from the Belfast attack featured prominently on the front pages of the nationals. The Daily Mail went as far as to warn Britain has a “gaping back door” and raised what it described as “grave questions” about immigration policy. Its leader column urged the government to confront what it called “the migrant threat.”

The disparity in coverage certainly raises uncomfortable questions. If an attack on a minority community that leaves five people injured and is widely described as potentially motivated by anti-Muslim hatred fails to command national attention, while incidents involving migrants dominate front pages and political debate, accusations of “two-tier journalism” become harder to dismiss.

As Bienkov acknowledged, the Edinburgh story did receive coverage in parts of the Scottish press. But unlike the events in Belfast, it was not judged significant enough to lead the national news agenda, a contrast that speaks to broader concerns about how violence, extremism and minority communities are covered in Britain’s media.

An onlookers seemed to agree.

“Indeed, we don’t have a two tier policing problem, we have a two tier media problem,” wrote one BlueSky user.

The post The Edinburgh attacks and the question of ‘two-tier journalism’ appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Remove Shabana Mahmood as Home Secretary and end ‘performative cruelty’ asylum policies, Alf Dubs tells Burnham

Andy Burnham should move Shabana Mahmood out of the home office and ‘rip up’ her policies on asylum if he becomes prime minister, the veteran Labour peer Alf Dubs has said.

Dubs came to the UK from Czechoslovakia in 1939 as part of the Kindertransport which assisted Jews persecuted in Nazi-controlled areas. He has been a fierce advocate for refugee rights within the Labour Party.

Dubs told the Guardian: “I think her talents would be better used elsewhere in cabinet to allow the new PM free rein to put his own stamp on asylum and immigration policy.

“At a time when the party needs unity, I do not believe that Shabana Mahmood’s policies represent the right approach.”

He went on to add: “This is Andy Burnham’s opportunity to correct some of the mistakes that the Starmer government made as regards asylum seekers and refugees.

“The proposed changes to indefinite leave to remain, for instance, which would apply retrospectively to people who came here in good faith and according to the rules, are simply unjust and should be reconsidered.

“We must stand firmly by our commitments under the 1951 refugee convention and the ECHR and not attempt to water them down which is what the current proposals threaten to do.”

Later in his comments to the Guardian, Dubs accused Mahmood’s policies of representing ‘performative cruelty’. He told the newspaper that the government should seek to control the UK’s borders but that “this control should also come with our commitment to basic rights, and compassion for those who are in time of greatest need. Not performative cruelty – like briefing the Home Office would start seizing refugees’ jewellery at the border. Or using incendiary language to blame refugees for ‘tearing our country apart’.”

Chris Jarvis is head of strategy and development at Left Foot Forward

Image credit: James Watling / Parsons Media – Creative Commons

The post Remove Shabana Mahmood as Home Secretary and end ‘performative cruelty’ asylum policies, Alf Dubs tells Burnham appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Nigel Farage skipped defence debate for £95 steak

Nigel Farage cares so much about defence, that he skipped a Parliamentary debate on the issue in favour of going to an exclusive stakehouse that charges £95 for a steak.

The Populist Decoder reports that Farage spent Brexit’s tenth anniversary at an exclusive central London restaurant with Arron Banks, a Leave.EU co-founder, and an aide nicknamed ‘Posh George’ — then posted the photo himself on Facebook.

“While he was being photographed leaving at 5.20pm, Parliament had been debating defence spending for hours. The same Parliament. The same afternoon. The same Farage who reportedly told the country Britain was ‘defenceless.”

That’s how much Farage cares about an issue he wants you to think he cares about.

I suppose having wrecked the economy, and with a majority of Britons now wanting to rejoin the EU, the only people really giving a toast to the Brexit anniversary are the likes of Farage who beneifted personally.

The post Nigel Farage skipped defence debate for £95 steak appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Two Reform councillors defect to Restore Britain in major blow to Farage

Two Reform councillors have defected to the extreme right-wing party Restore Britain today (26 June).

Dan Glover and Rob Aitkenhead were both elected in Warwickshire in the 2025 local elections under the Reform banner. They’ve now joined Restore barely a year after being elected.

Announcing their defections, Restore’s leader Rupert Lowe said they were ‘patriots who want the best for their community’.

Glover and Atikenhead’s defection is just the latest in a series of debacles besetting the Reform-run Warwickshire County Council. Reform has now lost four councillors since the 2025 election, with two going independent. Barely a month after taking control of the council last May, the Reform council leader Rob Howard resigned from the post. And in March this year, the now leader of the council George Finch narrowly survived a vote of no confidence by a single vote.

Despite these two defections, Restore remains a fringe political party. Currently, it has fewer than 40 councillors across the UK. That’s compared to more than 1,300 for the Greens and more than 2,300 for Reform.

However, in recent months Restore has emerged as a potential threat to Nigel Farage’s Reform. In the Makerfield by-election, Restore won 7 per cent of the vote. If they were to secure that level of support in other constituencies across the country at the next general election, they could potentially prevent Reform from winning dozens of seats by splitting the right-wing vote.

Similarly, if more Reform councillors begin to defect, Farage’s party could see itself losing influence in local government and even losing control of councils it currently runs.

Chris Jarvis is head of strategy and development at Left Foot Forward

The post Two Reform councillors defect to Restore Britain in major blow to Farage appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Unison general secretary backs Ed Miliband for chancellor

Andrea Egan – the general secretary of public services union Unison – has indicated she would back Ed Miliband becoming Andy Burnham’s chancellor.

Miliband is one of a number of people rumoured to be in the running for the job should Burnham become prime minister in the coming weeks. The other people reportedly being considered are the former health secretary Wes Streeting and the home secretary Shabana Mahmood.

Egan said: “Andy Burnham has a historic opportunity to rebuild our country in the interests of workers and communities, but that chance will be squandered if his government is made up of politicians determined to continue the same failed approach.

“We need a chancellor who will rewire the economy and properly invest to improve the lives of the majority. Of those reported to be in the running, only Ed Miliband could enact the kinds of policies trade unions and our members urgently need.”

Egan’s backing for Burnham contrasts with the stance of other key figures within the trade union movement.

Sharon Graham, the general secretary of Unite, has very publicly opposed Miliband becoming chancellor. She has said: “It is no secret that I disagree with Ed on almost every issue relating to a workers’ transition. Ed only seems to be interested in one side of the equation, rushing Britain to net zero with almost no thought for jobs, skills and national security.

“In my view, a Labour chancellor needs a vision for Britain that understands the skills we have, nurtures those skills and sees Britain as an industrial force that can lead in industries, not decimate them.

“Good investment in British industry is a no-brainer. Anyone who does not get that it matters where things are made and produced should not be chancellor.”

Gary Smith, the general secretary of GMB is also seeking to stop Miliband becoming chancellor, and is opposed to his stance on North Sea oil and gas.

Chris Jarvis is head of strategy and development at Left Foot Forward

The post Unison general secretary backs Ed Miliband for chancellor appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

The Socialist Campaign Group of MPs releases list of demands for next Labour leader

The Socialist Campaign Group (SCG) of left-wing Labour MPs has set out a list of demands for the next Labour leader, warning that unless the party changes course and reconnects with Labour voters, not only does it face the risk of wipeout but also risks a far-right government.

It comes after Keir Starmer announced this week that he would be stepping down after pressure from MPs and members of his cabinet, following Andy Burnham’s resounding victory in the Makerfield by-election.

The SCG grouping writes in Trbiune that a ‘change of Labour leadership will happen soon, but that alone will not be enough. Labour needs a fundamental change of direction’.

So what are the SCG demanding? Here’s a list below:

  • Equalising Capital Gains Tax and introducing a 2 percent levy on assets worth more than £10 million
  • Bringing water and energy into public ownership
  • The scrapping of plans for PFI-style schemes to fund new NHS health centres or other public services.
  • An emergency package of measures to protect living standards, including a genuine freeze on energy bills, universal free school meals and the expansion of affordable public transport
  • An Employment Rights Act 2.0 to ensure the complete delivery of the New Deal for Working People
  • A large-scale council house building programme and introduction of rent controls
  • Scrapping plans to double the time migrant workers already in our country need to secure settlement
  • Oppose any new oil and gas licences and invest in the transition to renewable energy needed to cut emissions,

The post The Socialist Campaign Group of MPs releases list of demands for next Labour leader appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

PINE64's Smart Speaker is a Home Assistant Powered Alternative to Amazon Echo

23 June 2026 at 15:46

PINE64 has been building budget-friendly ARM and RISC-V hardware since 2015, when the original PINE A64 single-board computer launched on Kickstarter. The community-driven outfit has since put out devices like the PinePhone, the ROCK series of SBCs, and the Ox64 RISC-V board.

And now with the PineVoice, they are stepping into the smart speaker space, going the Home Assistant way instead of bundling Alexa or Google Assistant.

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PINE64 points out that this device is still in the early stages of development and might have some snafus.

What does it pack?

this multi-colored picture shows the box contents of the pinevoice, with the speaker, usb-a to usb-c cable, and a quick start guide

Built specifically as a voice satellite (basically a relay) for Home Assistant and not a general-purpose smart speaker, the PineVoice's horsepower comes from the Bouffalo Lab BL606P.

Which is a RISC-V SoC that pairs a 480 MHz 64-bit T-Head C906, a 320 MHz 32-bit T-Head E907, and a 150 MHz 32-bit T-Head E902 core.

For the memory, PINE64 includes 32 MiB of pSRAM and 788KB of SRAM, along with 16 MiB of XSPI NOR flash for storage, and wireless connectivity is handled via 802.11 b/g/n WiFi and Bluetooth 5.2 (BT+BLE).

Wake word detection runs locally through MicroWakeWord, currently using the "Hey Jarvis" model from ESPHome instead of routing audio through a cloud server. The firmware speaks the Wyoming Protocol, which is how Home Assistant's voice interface talks to satellite devices like PineVoice.

A dual microphone array handles audio capture, a built-in speaker outputs audio with physical buttons for volume, and a hardware switch handles mic mutes. A center LED ring shows what PineVoice is doing at any given moment, and these light patterns are said to replace spoken responses from the speaker for most actions and states.

The whole thing measures 65 mm x 65 mm x 66 mm and connects over a single USB-C port that handles both power and data.

Get one

PineVoice is in stock now for $49.99 at the Pine Store's community price, with a $59.99 retail price for those buying elsewhere. It ships with a USB-A to USB-C cable in the box (as shown above), and PINE64 backs the device with a 30-day warranty.

Additionally, the source code for PineVoice's firmware can be found on Codeberg and the specification sheet on the documentation portal.


Suggested Read 📖: ArmSoM Sige6 is The First Sige Board to Ditch Rockchip

pine64's pinevoice smart speaker is shown on the left, on the right is some text
Yesterday — 26 June 2026Main stream

Fed up with complex note taking apps? Try Whisp for Linux

25 June 2026 at 21:10

Whisp scratchpad showing notes, backgrounds and data picker.New GTK4/libadwaita app Whisp is positioning itself as the note-taking app for people fed up with note-taking apps (the best one is always the next one, right?). Scratch that; Whisp pitches itself as “the anti-note for GNOME”, a riff on Antinote, a macOS app with a similar look and feature set. Developer Tanay Bhomia describes it as “a fluid, gesture-driven scratchpad designed for absolute speed”. The website takes shots at the complexity of Obsidian and Notion, but Whisp isn’t out to compete with either. It’s a foil to notes relying on databases, hierarchies and corkboard-and-red-string organisational complexity. Me? I am a disorganised savage. […]

You're reading Fed up with complex note taking apps? Try Whisp for Linux, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

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Fed up with complex note taking apps? Try Whisp for Linux

25 June 2026 at 21:10

Whisp scratchpad showing notes, backgrounds and data picker.New GTK4/libadwaita app Whisp is positioning itself as the note-taking app for people fed up with note-taking apps (the best one is always the next one, right?). Scratch that; Whisp pitches itself as “the anti-note for GNOME”, a riff on Antinote, a macOS app with a similar look and feature set. Developer Tanay Bhomia describes it as “a fluid, gesture-driven scratchpad designed for absolute speed”. The website takes shots at the complexity of Obsidian and Notion, but Whisp isn’t out to compete with either. It’s a foil to notes relying on databases, hierarchies and corkboard-and-red-string organisational complexity. Me? I am a disorganised savage. […]

You're reading Fed up with complex note taking apps? Try Whisp for Linux, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

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Andy Burnham would make a better prime minister than every other party leader, poll finds

Andy Burnham has been given a boost by a new poll which finds that Britons believe he would make a better Prime Minister than every other major party leader.

Burnham, who is in the running to become Prime Minister after Keir Starmer announced this week that he was stepping down, could be in Downing Street as early as July 17th should no one else put themselves forward.

He secured a resounding win in the Makerfield by-election, gaining more votes than both Reform and Restore combined, which strengthened his case for the leadership.

Now a new poll by YouGov finds that Britons believe the former Mayor of Greater Manchester would make a better Prime Minister than other major party leaders.

See the full breakdown of how Burnham compares to other party leaders below:

Burnham 43% vs Farage 23%
Burnham 38% vs Polanski 11%
Burnham 32% vs Badenoch 28%
Burnham 32% vs Davey 11%

The post Andy Burnham would make a better prime minister than every other party leader, poll finds appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Labour up SIX POINTS in first poll since Starmer announced his departure

The first poll carried out since Keir Starmer announced he’s standing down as prime minister has been published. It’s good news for the Labour Party.

Polling firm Find Out Now carried out the poll from 24-25 June in the immediate aftermath of Starmer’s announcement.

The poll found support for Labour is up substantially on a week prior.

The full results of the poll were as follows:

  • Reform: 24 per cent
  • Labour: 21 per cent
  • Tory: 18 per cent
  • Green: 15 per cent
  • Lib Dem: 12 per cent
  • SNP: 3 per cent

That might not seem to be too positive for Labour at a first glance. However, the 21 per cent for Labour is up six points on the 15 per cent Find Out Now had the party on just one week ago.

Reform are down three points on the previous week, the Greens down two points and the Lib Dems down one.

It remains to be seen whether this poll is an outlier or instead part of a wider trend.

Chris Jarvis is head of strategy and development at Left Foot Forward

The post Labour up SIX POINTS in first poll since Starmer announced his departure appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Cross-party group of MPs call for introduction of maximum working temperature

A cross-party group of MPs have backed calls for the introduction of a maximum working temperature. More than 20 MPs have signed an Early Day Motion (EDM) making the call as the UK endures record-breaking temperatures.

The EDM acknowledges the role that climate breakdown is playing in increasing the frequency and intensity of heatwaves in the UK and describes the major health issues that can arise as a result of extreme heat, including “dizziness, tiredness, asthma, throat infections and, in extreme cases, heat stroke and death”.

The signatories to the EDM state that they are “concerned at the increasing frequency and intensity of heatwaves being experienced in the UK, as a result of man-made climate change”, before going on to state: “that whereas the law specifies a minimum working temperature, no corresponding maximum figure exists in statute”.

Later, the EDM states that “current recommendations for employers to maintain a reasonable temperature within the workplace are impossible to enforce unless a worker is seriously injured or killed from heat stress”.

The EDM concludes by calling on the government to “back the TUC’s call for a maximum working temperature of 30 degrees Celsius, or 27 degrees Celsius for those doing strenuous work, beyond which employers would have a statutory duty to introduce effective control measures, such as installing ventilation or moving staff away from windows and sources of heat.”

The EDM has had the support of MPs from Labour, Your Party, the DUP and the Greens. Its primary sponsor is the Labour MP Rebecca Long-Bailey.

At the time of writing, 22 MPs have signed the EDM. They are as follows:

  1. Rebecca Long-Bailey – Labour
  2. John McDonnell – Labour
  3. Ian Lavery – Labour
  4. Jeremy Corbyn – Your Party
  5. Mary Kelly Foy – Labour
  6. Ian Byrne – Labour
  7. Jon Trickett – Labour
  8. Kate Osborne – Labour
  9. Bell Ribeiro-Addy – Labour
  10. Nadia Whittome – Labour
  11. Grahame Morris – Labour
  12. Steve Witherden – Labour
  13. Richard Burgon – Labour
  14. Andy McDonald – Labour
  15. Brian Leishman – Labour
  16. Jim Shannon – Democratic Unionist Party
  17. Neil Duncan-Jordan – Labour
  18. Apsana Begum – Labour
  19. Siân Berry – Green
  20. Ellie Chowns – Green
  21. Hannah Spencer – Green
  22. Adrian Ramsay – Green

EDMs are rarely debated, but are used as a way for MPs to raise issues, highlight campaigns and illustrate the scale of support in the House of Commons for a particular issue.

Chris Jarvis is head of strategy and development

Image credit: UK Parliament – Creative Commons

The post Cross-party group of MPs call for introduction of maximum working temperature appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Nigel Farage in meltdown over Hope not Hate as he files a second complaint in under a month

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage is so incenced at the work of anti-extremist campaign group Hope not Hate, that he has filed a second complaint against the organisation in under a month.

Hope not Hate has done outstanding work in holding Reform to account, exposing the party’s candidates for holding bigoted and hateful views while also campaigning against the politics of hate and division that they expose.

Farage of course, would rather such crucial work not happen.

He filed a complaint against the organisation earlier this month, claiming in a letter to the Charity Commission that Hope Unlimited Charitable Trust (HUCT) was funding private company Hope Not Hate Limited’s “political activities”.

Under UK charity law, a charitable trust can fund political activities, but only if the activity is directly intended to support its charitable purpose and does not cross into party politics.

Farage has tried to claim that Hope not Hate is funded entirely by grants from HUCT, and accused Hope not Hate of sending leaflets to Makerfield homes endorsing Labour candidate Andy Burnham at next month’s by-election and rejecting his party Reform UK.

That complaint has been rejected this week, with the Charity Commission finding that there was no case to answer.

Now Farage has filed a second complaint, this time to the Electoral Commission, claiming that Hope not Hate breached the spending cap in the Makerfield by-election imposed on local non-party campaigners of £700 without having to register with one of the candidate campaigns.

He claims Hope not Hate racked up thousands of pounds in spend in the month leading up to the by-election on Facebook alone.

Responding to his latest meltdown and complaint, Hope not Hate said its campaigning in Makerfield was ‘carefully tracked so as to remain within relevant electoral law spending limits’.

It added: “What Nigel Farage is really objecting to is the work Hope not Hate has done since the last General Election: exposing countless Reform candidates with records of racism, misogyny and extreme views, and ensuring voters understand who Reform is asking them to elect.”

“We are a thorn in Reform’s side because our work is effective. That is why this is the second complaint in such a short space of time. It will not be the last attempt to shut down legitimate scrutiny and it will not work.”

The post Nigel Farage in meltdown over Hope not Hate as he files a second complaint in under a month appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Unions join forces to try to stop Ed Miliband becoming Chancellor

Two of Britain’s biggest trade unions have joined forces in a bid to prevent Ed Miliband from being appointed Chancellor over his rush towards net zero policies which they say undermines industries and workers’ jobs.

Although Andy Burnham, who is expected to replace Keir Starmer as Prime Minister without a contest, has not made clear who he wants as his pick for Chancellor, several names have been mooted, including Ed Miliband, Wes Streeting and Shabana Mahmood.

Unions are said to be most opposed to Miliband, arguing that his policies towards the North Sea oil have damaged jobs in the sector and would undermine job security.

The FT reports that both Unite and the GMB have teamed up to oppose Miliband, with Gary Smith, General Secretary of the GMB, reported to have met Burnham and told him his views on the Chancellorship, telling Burnham that the impact of net zero policies on the North Sea Oil and gas industries was ‘shameful’ and ‘economic madness’.

Last week, Sharon Graham, the General Secretary of Unite, Labour’s biggest financial backer, warned Burnham not to make Miliband chancellor, saying that the country needed someone at the Treasury who ‘doesn’t decimate industry’.

Graham told the Times: “It is no secret that I disagree with Ed on almost every issue relating to a workers’ transition. Ed only seems to be interested in one side of the equation, rushing Britain to net zero with almost no thought for jobs, skills and national security.

“In my view, a Labour chancellor needs a vision for Britain that understands the skills we have, nurtures those skills and sees Britain as an industrial force that can lead in industries, not decimate them.

“Good investment in British industry is a no-brainer. Anyone who does not get that it matters where things are made and produced should not be chancellor.”

The post Unions join forces to try to stop Ed Miliband becoming Chancellor appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Government publishes bill to end LGBT+ conversion therapy

The government has published its draft legislation to ban LGBT+ conversion practices in England and Wales.

Conversion therapy refers to medical, psychiatric, psychological, religious, cultural or other attempts which seek to change someone’s gender identity or sexuality.

The government’s proposed ban will set the criminal threshold for conversion practices as conduct that aims to change someone’s sexual orientation or transgender identity through abusive acts that seriously harm the victim. 

According to the government, conversion therapy is still happening in England and Wales because of legal loopholes in legislation that covers domestic violence, coercive control and communications.

The new legislation would create new criminal offences of carrying out abusive conversion practices that cause serious harm, alarm or distress to the victim; and encouraging or assisting an abusive practice performed outside England and Wales.

Carrying out abusive conversion practices could see offenders sentenced to up to five years in prison.

On announcing the legislation, Olivia Bailey MP, Minister for Equalities, said: “Legal loopholes have left LGBT+ people vulnerable to these harmful acts which is why we must legislate.

“Conversion practices are driven by the false belief that being LGBT+ is shameful and can be forcibly changed.

“No-one should face abuse just because of who they are. That’s why we are delivering on our manifesto commitment to ban abusive conversion practices.”

The bill has been welcomed by LGBT+ rights campaign group Stonewall. Simon Blake, Stonewall’s CEO said: “People from the LGBTQ+ community are not broken or in need of ‘fixing’. That’s why I’m so pleased the government have published a draft bill to ban conversion practices that attempt to change someone’s sexual orientation or gender identity. These practices are abuse, and every day without a ban in place leaves people at risk of serious harm.

“This is testament to the hard work of campaigners and survivors who have bravely shared their stories and refused to give up. We look forward to continuing our work with sector partners, Parliament, and government to ensure the legislation is robust and effective.”

Chris Jarvis is head of strategy and development at Left Foot Forward

Image credit: Quinn Dombrowski – Creative Commons

The post Government publishes bill to end LGBT+ conversion therapy appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Manchester mayoral election poll shows just how close it is between Reform and Labour

One of the first polls for the Manchester Mayoral election, which was triggered by the resignation of Andy Burnham, shows just how much of a tight race it is between Reform and Labour. 

The survey, carried out by FocalData on behalf of campaign group Hope Not Hate, put Labour on 33.2 per cent of first preference support, with Reform UK close behind on 30.1 per cent. 

The Greens were third on 12.5 per cent, followed by the Conservatives on 11.1 per cent and the Liberal Democrats on 7.6 per cent.

Labour are hoping to retain the mayoralty and have picked Manchester Council leader Bev Craig as their candidate, who is a close ally of Burnham.

Reform are yet to announce their candidate (let’s hope they properly vet them this time) but believe they can mount a serious challenge for the seat.

The contest will be seen as a crucial first test for Burnham and the Labour Party, as they seek to build on recent momentum following the Makerfield by-election result. 

The post Manchester mayoral election poll shows just how close it is between Reform and Labour appeared first on Left Foot Forward: Leading the UK's progressive debate.

Before yesterdayMain stream

Ubuntu brings Livepatch to arm64 for rebootless kernel updates

24 June 2026 at 22:10

Kernel mascot on Ubuntu logo against tv static.Canonical has brought Livepatch to Arm64 devices for the first time, allowing Ubuntu systems on Arm hardware to apply critical kernel security patches without a full reboot. Livepatch is one of Ubuntu’s best hidden security features – it’s not enabled by default, requires Ubuntu Pro – as it allows kernel security updates to be applied in memory while your system is running. Normally, a restart is needed. Perfect if you’re a bit lazy running a task or workload you don’t want interrupted. Livepatch is now available on Ubuntu 26.04 LTS and Ubuntu Core 26 running on Arm64 devices for the first time […]

You're reading Ubuntu brings Livepatch to arm64 for rebootless kernel updates, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

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