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Reform UK Nottinghamshire council leader bans local newspaper’s reporters

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Anna WhittakerPolitical reporter, BBC Nottingham

BBC A man wearing glasses and a blue waistcoat and purple tie. BBC

Mick Barton has banned his councillors from any engagement with the Nottingham Post and its online arm Nottinghamshire Live

The Reform UK leader of Nottinghamshire County Council has banned a local newspaper from speaking to him or any of his councillors “with immediate effect”.

Mick Barton has banned the Nottingham Post and its online arm Nottinghamshire Live over what the BBC understands was a disagreement about a story it ran on local government reorganisation.

Also included in the ban are BBC-funded journalists who work at the publication as part of the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS).

Senior editor Natalie Fahy said she was “very concerned” by the “unprecedented ban”. In response, Barton said the party would not “allow misinformation to shape the narrative of our governance”.

The authority will stop sending press releases to the publication, and Barton and his colleagues will not give interviews or invite them to council events.

Reporters from Nottinghamshire Live and the LDRS will continue to attend public meetings.

A spokesperson for the council said: “The ban, which will only be lifted for emergency scenarios like flooding and weather-related cases, incidents at council-run schools, adult social care, or public safety issues, has come into immediate effect.”

In a statement, issued on Thursday, Barton said the move was “not about silencing journalism”, but “about upholding the principle that freedom of speech must be paired with responsibility and honesty”.

“We firmly believe that open dialogue is vital to a healthy democracy, and we welcome scrutiny that is conducted with fairness, balance and integrity,” he added.

“However, we also have a duty to protect the credibility of our governance and the voices that we represent.

“For this reason, we will not be engaging with Nottinghamshire Live or with any other media outlet we consider to be consistently misrepresenting our policies, actions or intentions.”

Reform took control of the authority at the local elections in May, winning 40 of 66 seats.

Barton, who has been a councillor on Mansfield District Council since 2003, was elected to the county council for the first time in May and later announced as leader.

Nottinghamshire Live editor Ms Fahy said those who applauded Reform’s decision “should think carefully”.

“We pride ourselves on our balanced and accurate coverage of all political parties across the county and our treatment and coverage of Reform has been no different to any other parties,” she said.

“We see this as a direct attack on the free press and our ability to hold elected members to account. Ultimately, we will struggle to find out where taxpayers’ money is being spent, so those who applaud this decision by Reform should think carefully.

“My concern as a journalist of 20 years is that we are increasingly seeing attacks of this kind which affect how we can carry out our jobs effectively. We’ll continue to speak out and fight against them in the hope of bringing about change.”

The Liberal Democrats have written to Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, urging him to intervene.

Liberal Democrat culture, media and sport spokesperson, MP Max Wilkinson, called it a “dangerous and chilling” decision.

“Reform’s move to block local journalists from reporting on their work is straight out of Donald Trump’s playbook,” he added.

‘Extremely dangerous step’

MP Kevin Hollinrake, Conservative Party chairman, said it was a “disgrace for Reform to deliberately cut off local journalism”.

He added: “They are completely denying communities the right to scrutinise those in power.

“If Reform can’t even face questions from the Nottingham Post, what hope is there that they could ever face the serious responsibilities of government?”

The leader of the opposition on Nottinghamshire County Council, Conservative Sam Smith, called the ban an “extremely dangerous step”.

He added: “It’s not just the press Reform are shutting out in Nottinghamshire. It’s the voice and views of residents.”

The BBC funds 165 LDRS reporters across the UK, three of which are funded in Nottingham.

A spokesperson for the BBC said: “Independent journalism is vital to local democracy, and journalists must be free to question those in power without fear of reprisals.

“We continue to support Notts Live in seeking a resolution.”

Former MLB player Mark Teixeira running for open House seat in Texas

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Former Major League Baseball player Mark Teixeira is running for an open U.S. House seat in Texas, he announced on Wednesday. 

Teixeira, who played first base for four teams — including the Texas Rangers — over a 13-year career, made the announcement in a post on X, saying he’s a “lifelong conservative” and is running on principles to make Texas and the U.S. “great.”

He’s running for the seat representing Texas’s 21st Congressional District, currently held by Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas). 

Roy, a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, announced last week that he would run for state attorney general with Ken Paxton running for Senate. 

Teixeira pledged to be a supporter of President Trump. 

“It takes teamwork to win – I’m ready to help defend President Trump’s America First agenda, Texas families, and individual liberty,” he said. 

Teixeira praised Roy’s time representing the district in a release, saying he served with “unwavering courage and leaves an impressive legacy of principled conservative leadership.” He also leaned into his own background in the state. 

“Playing for the Texas Rangers and raising my family in the Lone Star State has been one of the greatest blessings of my life,” he said. “Now I’m ready to answer the call to serve my country, my state, and the conservative principles that made Texas the envy of the nation.” 

Teixeira played for more than four years in Texas before also playing for the Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles Angels and New York Yankees. Throughout his career, he was an All-Star three times, won a Gold Glove five times and won the World Series with the Yankees in 2009. 

He retired from baseball after the 2016 season. 

Teixeira outlined a variety of conservative platform points on his website, calling to enhance border security and deport those here illegally, expand the Department of Government Efficiency to rein in “wasteful spending” and defend the Second Amendment. 

He also declared his opposition to abortion, vowed to work to end “forever wars” and called for congressional term limits. 

Teixeira is the first Republican to enter the race following Roy’s decision but may be joined by others. Bexar County GOP Vice Chair Kyle Sinclair told The Texas Tribune that he’s considering running in the district. 

Whoever wins the Republican nomination will likely win the seat in the heavily conservative-leaning district.

Why Nvidia’s bull market rages on: Opening Bid top takeaway

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Nvidia’s (NVDA) ho-hum quarter and outlook last night is sending ripples throughout various sectors and individual stocks this morning.

The market wanted a perfect earnings day from Nvidia, but the AI chip darling came up slightly short — just not short enough to unsettle the legion of Nvidia bulls on Wall Street.

“Demand signals remain rock solid with Hopper and Blackwell sold out across the board,” Jefferies analyst Blayne Curtis said. “Blackwell Ultra ramp well underway alleviating concerns of supply chain issues going forward.”

The day after Nvidia earnings is like the day after the Super Bowl for us at Yahoo Finance. Lots of analysis going around!

There’s a ton to unpack from this Nvidia report and from CEO Jensen Huang’s interview on our show last night.

First, to those bears worrying about slowing AI demand, we didn’t see it in the report. That’s even with the data center sales miss. Here’s how Jensen summed up the demand backdrop:

“We obviously had a record quarter without China, and we just guided another record quarter without China. … It’s incredible growth. If you look at the AI native companies, last year, they did $2 billion altogether, their first year of AI revenues. The second year of AI revenues, $20 billion, [a] tenfold increase in one year. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.”

Next, Nvidia hasn’t included any sales for its China H20 chip in its current quarter outlook. The Street was looking for an estimate of at least $2 billion. Jensen made it a point to dissect the potential of the China market.

“[For] every American technology company, China is important to have. … It’s the second largest computing market in the world. I’m just delighted that President Trump sees the wisdom of American leadership at this time where AI is taking off. It’s vital that America wins the AI race.”

And lastly, with the ink not even dry on Intel’s (INTC) deal to give a 10% stake to the US government, Jensen downplayed more deals like this happening in the industry.

“And it hasn’t really come up [with the president] … It’s about re-industrializing the United States because we need to have manufacturing here. We need to be able to manufacture critical technology here,” he said.

“It’s a wonderful vision, and we should get all behind it, and Nvidia is all behind it.”

Computer and printer giant HP Inc. (HPQ) had a quarter that left me thinking about old tech plays navigating the new tariff normal.



UK, France and Germany move to reimpose UN sanctions

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The UK, France and Germany have begun the process of restoring major UN sanctions on Iran – lifted under a 2015 deal – as tensions once again escalate over Iran’s nuclear programme.

The move will trigger a so-called snapback mechanism, which could result in the return of sanctions in 30 days.

The three countries, participants in the 2015 deal, warned two weeks ago that they were ready to do this unless Iran agreed to a “diplomatic solution” by the end of August.

Talks between Iran and the US over its nuclear programme have not resumed since June when the US bombed Iranian nuclear sites and Iran barred UN-backed inspectors from accessing its facilities.

The snapback provision was built into the 2015 accord and allows for a participant to initiate the process to bring back sanctions if they believe Iran has significantly failed to fulfil its nuclear commitments by notifying the UN Security Council.

The UK, France and Germany, known as the E3, took the step in a letter to the Security Council. The council now has 30 days in which to decide whether to continue sanctions relief or allow it to lapse.

The letter said Iran’s non-compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal was “clear and deliberate”. It declared that Iran had “no civilian justification” for its high enriched uranium stockpile – uranium purified to near military grade – and that its nuclear programme “remains a clear threat to international peace and security”.

The E3 said that during the next 30 days they would continue to engage with Iran “on any serious diplomatic efforts to restore [its] compliance with its commitments”.

Iran had warned of repercussions if the snapback was triggered.

Years-long crippling economic sanctions were lifted in exchange for curbs to Iran’s nuclear programme under the UN-backed deal between Iran and the US, UK, France, Germany, China and the EU.

But the deal unravelled after Donald Trump pulled the US out, calling it flawed and reimposing nuclear-related sanctions in 2018 during his first term. Iran stepped up its nuclear activities in response, fuelling a renewed crisis.

Western powers and the global nuclear body the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) say they are not convinced that Iran’s nuclear programme has purely peaceful purposes. Iran strongly insists it is not seeking nuclear weapons, and that its nuclear programme is solely a civilian one.

RFK Jr. says ‘aggregation of causes’ likely leads to autism

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Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said on Thursday he thinks his agency’s forthcoming report on autism will reveal an “aggregation of causes” that lead to the neurological disorder.

“This is a crisis,” Kennedy said in a “Fox & Friends” interview on Fox News Thursday. “There is not a single cause. There are many, many — there’s an aggregation of causes.”

“And we are now developing evidence, sufficient evidence, to ask for regulatory action on some of those, or at least recommendations,” he continued.

Kennedy, in April, vowed to find the cause of growing rates of autism, calling it an “epidemic” that “dwarfs the COVID epidemic.”

On Tuesday, Kennedy said his agency is on track to identify “interventions” that he said are “certainly causing autism,” as well as possible ways of addressing them by September.

Trump asked Kennedy for a progress update during a Cabinet meeting Tuesday, saying, “The autism is such a tremendous horror show. What’s happening in our country and some other countries, but mostly our country. How are you doing?”

“We are doing very well,” Kennedy responded. “We will have announcements as promised in September, finding interventions, certain interventions, now that are clearly almost certainly causing autism. And we’re going to be able to address those in September.”

Kennedy has long claimed that environmental factors, or vaccines, are likely culprits behind the rising rate of autism diagnoses, arguing research to back this up has been blocked by federal authorities.

Some health experts say the rising rates are more likely a result of better autism detection, since the diagnosis was first developed, and a broadening of criteria in recent years. The first time someone was diagnosed with autism was in 1943.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says 1 in 31 children and 1 in 45 adults in the U.S. have autism, significantly higher than the 1 in 150 rate reported just a few decades ago.

Kennedy said on Thursday he suspects the rate is even higher, noting California “has the best data collection system” and reports autism rates in children of up to 1 in 19, including in some part of the states, where 1 in 12.5 boys have autism.

Kennedy is embroiled in a separate controversy over resignations at the CDC, where the director was pushed out on Wednesday. Kennedy has defended the shakeup at the CDC.

MongoDB (MDB) Soars 38% on Strong Earnings

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We recently published 10 Stocks With Easy 7-38% Upside in Just a Day. MongoDB, Inc. (NASDAQ:MDB) is one of the best performers on Wednesday.

MongoDB soared by 37.96 percent on Wednesday to close at $295.70 apiece as investor sentiment was bolstered by its impressive earnings performance in the second quarter of the year and a higher price target from an investment firm.

In an updated report, MongoDB, Inc. (NASDAQ:MDB) said net loss narrowed by 13.76 percent to $47 million from $54.5 million in the same period last year. Revenues increased by 23.7 percent to $591 million from $478 million.

MongoDB (MDB) Soars 38% on Strong Earnings
MongoDB (MDB) Soars 38% on Strong Earnings

In the first half, net loss narrowed by 37 percent to $84.67 million from $135 million, while revenues grew by 22.7 percent to $1.14 billion from $929 million in the same comparable period.

Following the results, MongoDB, Inc. (NASDAQ:MDB) earned a higher price target of $265 from Macquarie, versus the $230 previously. However, the investment firm remained neutral for its stock.

According to Macquarie, MongoDB, Inc.’s (NASDAQ:MDB) strategic shift in its go-to-market approach appears to be gaining ground, as it now focuses on strategic accounts and winning higher-quality workloads.

While we acknowledge the potential of MDB as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an extremely cheap AI stock that is also a major beneficiary of Trump tariffs and onshoring, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock.

Volunteer Met officer found guilty of child sex offences

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A Metropolitan Police volunteer officer has been found guilty of raping and sexually assaulting a child.

James Bubb, who now identifies as a woman named Gwyn Samuels, groomed one of his two victims online before sexually assaulting her when she was just 12 years old.

The 27-year-old defendant was also found guilty of raping a woman he met online while posing as a 16-year-old girl.

On Thursday, in relation to one complainant, Bubb was found guilty of one count of raping a child under 13, one count of sexual activity with a child, one count of assault of a child under 13 by penetration, and one count of assault by penetration.

He was found not guilty of one count of rape and one count of sexual activity with a child in relation to that same complainant.

Bubb was found guilty of one count of rape against a second complainant.

The offences took place between 1 January 2018 and 2 April 2024, Amersham Crown Court heard.

Jurors were told the defendant, who still identified as male at the time of the alleged offences, would be referred to by their biological sex throughout the trial.

The Kremlin is trying to make ‘Russophobia’ a thing

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In Russia’s view, the Western world has a big problem: It doesn’t like Russians.

The reason, in the Kremlin’s telling, is not Russia’s devastation of Ukraine or its nuclear threats. Instead, the culprit is “the propaganda of Russophobia, unleashed by the West.”

Recent weeks have seen a new burst of Russian talk about “Russophobia,” a term that implies that fear of Russia is a form of mental illness. While anxiety about Russia appears quite rational these days, Moscow wants to depict Russophobia as an unhinged ideology that the world must join forces to oppose.

On July 26, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova called for establishment of an “International Day Against Russophobia,” much like International Holocaust Remembrance Day. Two days before that, the Russian Foreign Ministry issued some 150 examples of “hate speech” toward Russia by Western “officials and elites.” The examples, separated into collections from 2024 and 2025, were mainly from government figures.

The “hate speech” in question included statements to the effect that Putin is a dictator and Europe’s enemy; that peace depends on Western strength; that Putin is emulating the tactics of Stalin and the Nazis; that the Russian president cannot be trusted even after a ceasefire; and that Europe should be on the alert for Russian spies and assassins. The 2025 list includes Sen. Lindsey Graham’s (R-S.C.) suggestion that Putin “ask the Ayatollah” if he wants to know what Trump might do if Putin fails to declare a ceasefire in Ukraine.

Judging from the list, the Kremlin’s definition of hate speech seems mainly to be negative comments about the actions of Putin’s government. The examples contain no blanket indictments of the Russian people. There is nothing along the lines of the eliminationist rhetoric about Ukrainians that proliferate on Russian television: that they are rats, roaches, flea-ridden dogs and pigs; that anti-Russian beliefs need to be beaten out of Ukrainian children’s heads; and that Ukrainians deserve “no New Testament ethics.”

The ministry’s 2025 list has already led to a diplomatic explosion between Moscow and Rome. The collection included a comment by Italian President Sergio Mattarella that compared the invasion of Ukraine to actions by the Third Reich. Italy’s Foreign Minister, Antonio Tajani, summoned the Russian ambassador July 30 to declare that including Mattarella in a list of Russophobes was “a provocation to the republic and the Italian people.”

The ambassador, Alexei Paramonov, retorted in an August 8 Izvestia interview that “two new viruses have penetrated the Italian elite in place of COVID: Russophobia and Ukrophilia, which are taking on particularly aggressive forms.”

Russian-Italian relations were already strained after the cancellation of a concert with Russian conductor Valery Gergiev, whose planned appearance at a music festival near Naples had brought an outcry from opponents of Russia’s war in Ukraine. In response, Russian media said, Kremlin sympathizers hastily organized “anti-Russophobia” events in seven Italian cities, featuring posters, concerts and film showings.

The concept of Russophobia isn’t new, per se. Use of the term became common in Russian official speech after the 2014 Maidan Revolution in Ukraine. Putin used it twice in his lengthy 2021 article laying out his grievances against Ukraine. Russia called a special U.N. Security Council meeting in March 2023 to discuss Russophobia, where its delegates faced assertions Russia was using the issue to cover up its own war crimes. In May, Moscow authorities used alleged Russophobia as a reason for outlawing Amnesty International.

Where might this newly invigorated anti-Russophobia campaign lead? Russian officials may press international conferences on racism, religious discrimination and similar issues to include Russophobia in the discussions. And even if some ridicule the idea, in light of Russia’s action in Ukraine, Russian spokespeople will nevertheless gain new forums to spread their version of the war.

Russia might also induce a few friendly countries to add Russophobia to their hate speech laws. Such a gambit would not only outlaw critics of Russia in those countries, but allow the Kremlin to claim that the campaign against Russophobia was gathering speed.

Focusing on Russophobia, however, has flaws as an international propaganda strategy. Complaining about people not liking Russia suggests a stunning lack of self-awareness for a nation pounding its neighbor into rubble. Moreover, the assertion that Western propaganda is strong enough to spread waves of Russophobia worldwide makes Russia look feeble.

Russia is right about one thing, though: the claim that a lot of Westerners don’t like Russians. A June Pew Research poll found that across 13 NATO countries, 84 percent had no confidence in Putin and 79 percent had an unfavorable opinion of Russia. Given Russia’s recent behavior, those views are not surprising.

Thomas Kent is senior fellow for strategic communication at the American Foreign Policy Council in Washington, D.C. He teaches at Columbia University and is a consultant on Russian affairs and the world information war.

Calabasas Beverage Company unveils investment, appoints new CEO

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Calabasas Beverage Company (CBC), the sales venture formed by 818 Tequila and RTD supplier Sprinter, has landed a round of investment and appointed a new CEO.

The vehicle was launched by the two brands last year to support the brands’ sales and marketing.

Speaking to Just Drinks in July last year, the then CEO of 818, Sprinter and CBC Mike Novy said CBC would be a “commercial front end” representing both businesses.

According a statement from CBC, it has received investment from the Pérez family, which owns Grupo Solave, the group that produces 818 Tequila in Jalisco, Mexico.

Financial terms of the detail were not disclosed. With the deal, Grupo Solave will become a part-owner of 818 Tequila, which will “deepen the partnership” and will “reinforc[e] a shared commitment to excellence in craft and production”.

Grupo Solave has been growing agaves for four generations in Jalisco and are now the largest family-owned agave growers in Mexico, according to CBC.

A statement from Grupo Solave on LinkedIn added: “In 2021, 818 Tequila marked a turning point in our history by becoming Grupo Solave’s first maquila brand. That initial trust transformed into joint growth and a relationship based on commitment and shared vision.

“Today, we are taking another step forward by consolidating a strategic investment in Tequila 818, to build a continued solid and sustainable future with a positive impact on the community and the Tequila industry.”

Alongside the investment, CBC has also made Larry Goodrich, chairman of CBC, the company’s new CEO. He previously served as CEO of 818 Tequila during the brand’s formative years and early expansion.

According to the firm, Goodrich’s return to CBC “brings not only proven leadership but also a deep historical knowledge of the brand.

“This unique perspective will serve as a strong foundation for guiding CBC through its next phase of growth.”

818 Tequila and Sprinter were founded by American media personalities Kendall and Kylie Jenner

US-based 818 Tequila, founded in 2021, entered the UK market in 2023 alongside international plans to expand further into Europe.

The tequila brand then launched in Germany in December last year, and revealed it was working with Berlin-based Jaguar Mezcal Boutique (JMB) in its efforts to expand in the German market.

Named after Jenner’s area code in California, the 818 range features four products: Blanco, Reposado, Añejo and Eight Reserve.

“Calabasas Beverage Company unveils investment, appoints new CEO” was originally created and published by Just Drinks, a GlobalData owned brand.

Froome airlifted to hospital after training crash

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Four-time Tour de France winner Chris Froome suffers multiple injuries in a training crash near his home in Monaco.