Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Mark La"


25 mentions found


CNN —Las Vegas Aces superstar A’ja Wilson broke the WNBA single-season rebound record on Tuesday, picking up seven boards in an 85-72 win over the Seattle Storm. Despite making history once again on Tuesday night, Wilson was relatively indifferent to the record. Liberty and Lynx lock top two seedsMinnesota Lynx guard Kayla McBride shoots a layup against the Connecticut Sun. The Lynx are the hottest team in the league, having won seven in a row and going 13-1 since the Olympic break. Tuesday night’s WNBA scoresAway @ home (winners in bold)Minnesota Lynx 78-76 Connecticut SunNew York Liberty 87-71 Washington MysticsChicago Sky 70-86 Atlanta DreamLas Vegas Aces 85-72 Seattle StormPhoenix Mercury 85-81 Los Angeles Sparks
Persons: A’ja Wilson, Angel Reese, Wilson, I’m, , Becky Hammon, , Kayla McBride, Erica Denhoff, Bridget Carleton, Napheesa Collier, Carleton, , Alyssa Thomas ’, Betnijah Laney, Hamilton, Ariel Atkins, Scott Taetsch, Breanna Stewart Organizations: CNN, Las Vegas Aces, WNBA, Seattle Storm, Chicago Sky, Aces, Las Vegas, Sky, Connecticut Sun, Dallas Wings, ” Aces, Houston Comets, Liberty, Lynx, Minnesota Lynx, New York Liberty, Eastern Conference, Washington Mystics, New York, Mystics, Connecticut Sun New York Liberty, Washington Mystics Chicago Sky, Seattle Storm Phoenix Mercury, Angeles Sparks Locations: New
Minder said some companies face going out of business if they don't pay the ransom. He said organizations might also pay when cybercriminals take sensitive or proprietary information, such as personally identifiable information, and threaten to release it. Both paying and not paying can be riskyLance said that whether to pay ransom is ultimately up to individual companies. The FBI warns against paying ransom to attackers, as there's no guarantee you'll get your data back. Seeking help is crucialLance said that if you encounter ransomware, "don't try to go at it alone without any experience."
Persons: , Mark Lance, Kurtis Minder, Minder, Lance Organizations: FBI, Service, Google, MGM, Boeing, CDK Global, Caesars, GuidePoint, ransomware, IBM, US Securities and Exchange, cybercriminals Locations: Florida, North Carolina
In 2023, mass-tort lawyers spent $152 million on TV ads and millions more on social media. The data provider X Ante estimated that in 2023, mass-tort lawyers spent $152 million on TV ads and millions more on social media. The decades that followed mass torts' onset on the national stage showed the big risks and big rewards of mass torts. AdvertisementIn a class action, a settlement is public, and the judge has to approve the lawyers' fees. But others are confident that indebted mass-tort lawyers can bounce back from a few bad bets.
Persons: Mike Papantonio, Pap, Johnson, Paul Cody, Bayer, Chris Seeger, audibles, Budd, Ness Motley, Motley Rice, South Carolina —, doling, Seeger, Wyeth, Phil Federico, Paul Hanly who'd, Federico, Lejeune, who've, Camp Lejeune, mack, Curt Miner, I've, Don Worley, Worley, , Daniel A, Mark Lanier, wouldn't, Elizabeth Chamblee Burch, Burch, Ellen Relkin, Merck, Vioxx, There's, Lucian Pera, Keller Postman, Jeremy Troxel, Keller, Troxel, Michael McDonald, Warren Postman, Postman, Kelsey Vlamis, Jack Newsham Organizations: Wynn, Vegas, Camp Lejeune, pharma, Supreme, X, Pfizer, Defense, Marines, Veterans, Foreign, US Marine Corps, Johnson, University of Georgia, Business, Intuit, Rihanna, Morning Investments, Fortress Investment, Gramercy Funds, Deepwater, Investments Locations: Camp, Texas, South Carolina, Baltimore, North Carolina, Camp Lejeune, America, Beverly Hills , California, nonbanks
The 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris drew a combined average of 30.6 million viewers across NBCU’s constellation of platforms, marking an 82% jump in viewership compared to the Tokyo Games and making the Games the most-streamed Olympics of all time. The network’s Spanish-language broadcast on Telemundo also saw a 26% jump over the same period during the Tokyo Games three years ago. “The Olympics reestablished its unique power to reassemble the American media audience,” said Gary Zenkel, the NBC Olympics president. “NBC Nightly News” anchored by Lester Holt averaged 7.6 million viewers during the two-week period, and the “Today” show averaged 3.1 million viewers, the network said. Last month, Comcast reported the streamer had lost 500,000 subscribers in the second quarter, falling to 33 million total, well below Netflix’s 277 million subscribers and Disney’s 153.6 million.
Persons: , Peacock, Gary Zenkel, , NBCU, Al Michael’s, NBCUniversal, Mark Lazarus, Lester Holt Organizations: New, New York CNN, Comcast, Tokyo Games, Telemundo, Olympics, NBC, America, USA, US, France, Netflix, Amazon Prime, Paris Games, Tokyo, Games, Warner Bros, NBA, Paris Olympics, NBCUniversal Media, “ Parks, Studios Locations: New York, Paris, “ Paris
PARIS — Lighting the Olympic cauldron symbolically opened these Games — and, as much as possible, might have also taken a torch to some awful pandemic memories. The past two Games were staged in bubbles in and around Beijing and Tokyo as Covid was still a factor. And while some athletes have tested positive for Covid during the Paris Games, they have not upended competition. (NBC News is a division of NBCUniversal, which owns the U.S. media rights to the Olympic Games through 2032.) French fans have been wildly cheering for their athletes and team throughout these Games — so much so, that even Americans have taken notice.
Persons: we’ve, , Covid, Thomas Samson, , Keylle Fabrino, “ It’s, Selma Attie, ” Mark Lazarus, Katie Ledecky, they’ve, Léon Marchand, ” Ledecky Organizations: PARIS, Paris Games, Getty, Brasil, NBC, Olympic Games, NBC Universal Media Group, Los Angeles, Paris La Défense, U.S Locations: Taiwanese, London, Beijing, Tokyo, Paris, Brazil, France, NBCUniversal, Los Angeles, Inglewood
For months, diplomats and analysts in foreign capitals have worried that prolonged political upheaval in the United States could invite aggression abroad, whether in Russia’s waging of war in Ukraine, North Korea’s rogue nuclear ambitions or China’s expansionist designs in the South China Sea. Now, less than 100 days before Americans elect a new president, that broader geopolitical crisis has erupted in the familiar theater of the Middle East. The targeted killings of Hezbollah and Hamas leaders in Beirut and Tehran have deepened fears of a regionwide conflict — one that the United States, caught up in its own political drama at home, may have little capacity to avert or even contain. On Wednesday, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said the United States had not been involved in, or even informed of, the operation in Tehran, which the Iranian government swiftly blamed on Israel. To some, Mr. Blinken’s statement confirmed a dangerous power vacuum in the region.
Persons: Antony J, Blinken Locations: United, Ukraine, North, South China, Beirut, Tehran, United States, Israel
In an unusual move, a British court on Thursday named the 17-year-old suspect in a stabbing rampage that left three children dead and eight injured in northwestern England early this week. The suspect, Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, appeared in a court in Liverpool to face three counts of murder, 10 counts of attempted murder, and possession of a bladed article. Although the police said repeatedly that the suspect had been born in Cardiff, Wales, misinformation spread rapidly on social media claiming that he was an undocumented immigrant. The proliferation of those erroneous reports persuaded the judge, Andrew Menary, to lift the typical restrictions on the news media’s ability to report the identity of an underage suspect. “Continuing to prevent the full reporting has the disadvantage of allowing others to spread misinformation, in a vacuum,” Judge Menary said, according to the Press Association.
Persons: Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, Taylor Swift, Andrew Menary, Rudakubana, Judge Menary Organizations: Press Association Locations: England, Liverpool, Southport, Cardiff , Wales
The political attention of the nation will turn to the desert on Tuesday evening as Arizona holds its primary elections in the triple-digit summer heat. Here are the key races to watch in the Copper State. On the Republican side, Kari Lake is expected to emerge from a primary race against Mark Lamb, the Pinal County sheriff. Ms. Lake’s scorched-earth governor’s campaign divided Republicans in Arizona, and she is still working to mend fences within the party. But she is favored to defeat Sheriff Lamb, a right-wing candidate who has made tougher border restrictions a centerpiece of his campaign.
Persons: Kyrsten, Ruben Gallego, Kyrsten Sinema, Kari Lake, Mark Lamb, Lake, Donald J, Trump, Lake’s, Sheriff Lamb Organizations: Senate, Democrat, Democratic, Republican, Republicans Locations: Arizona, Copper State, Phoenix, U.S, Pinal County
Kari Lake won the Republican primary for U.S. Senate in Arizona on Tuesday, according to The Associated Press, setting up a high-stakes contest in the fall for the seat of Senator Kyrsten Sinema, who is retiring. A former news anchor, she will now face Representative Ruben Gallego, a Phoenix-area former Marine who had no opposition in the Democratic primary. “Thank you for putting your faith in me, Arizona,” Ms. Lake wrote on X. “I won’t let you down.”Ms. Lake and Mr. Gallego have already spent months attacking each other. Running in a border state, Ms. Lake has accused Mr. Gallego of being a far-left radical and favoring loose restrictions on immigration, while Mr. Gallego has blasted Ms. Lake for her shifting stance on abortion rights and for continuing to make baseless claims of election fraud.
Persons: Kari Lake, Kyrsten Sinema, Mark Lamb, Ruben Gallego, Lake, Gallego, Sinema, Mr, Organizations: Republican, U.S, Senate, Associated Press, Trump, Marine, Democratic, Democratic Party Locations: Arizona, Pinal County, Phoenix, , Arizona
Here was the old cowboy rifle his wife had gifted him when he first won his post in 2016. It sat across from an animal skull and an engraved pistol, and it was below a framed New York Post cover story praising him as the “last line of defense” against drug traffickers. “I’m a dadgum patriot,” Mr. Lamb said. But he’s not Kari Lake, the former news anchor and close Trump ally who has dominated a race Mr. Lamb says he’s still hopeful he can win. For months Ms. Lake, 54, has held substantial leads over Mr. Lamb, 52, in surveys.
Persons: Mark Lamb, strode, Donald, Melania, Barron —, ” Mr, Lamb, he’s, Kari Lake, Trump, Representative Ruben Gallego, Kyrsten Sinema Organizations: Republican, U.S . Senate, New, Mar, Washington Republican, , Representative, Democratic, Democrat Locations: Pinal County, New York, Washington
But they need to start now, says Mark La Spisa, a certified financial planner and president of Vermilion Financial. "If they wait until 65 to assess their situation, that's what causes anxiety," La Spisa says. Do a 'financial fire drill'"Starting at age 50, you want to do a financial fire drill every day," La Spisa says. Sign up for long-term care insuranceLong-term care insurance covers a host of services not typically included in regular health insurance. "If you have quality long-term care, you are transferring the risk from yourself to the insurance company," La Spisa says.
Persons: Mark La Spisa, La Spisa, Mark La, Carolyn McClanahan, McClanahan Organizations: Pew Research, Planning Locations: Vermilion, walkable
Martin S. Indyk, a diplomat, author and foreign-policy thinker who spent decades trying to solve the riddle of Middle East peace, twice as the United States ambassador to Israel and later as a special envoy for President Barack Obama, died on Thursday at his home in New Fairfield, Conn. An Australian-bred academic with a quick wit, blunt manner and pro-Israel pedigree, Mr. Indyk cut an unconventional figure in the State Department of the 1990s. But he propelled himself to the heart of America’s efforts to make peace between the Israelis and Palestinians. In 2013, he shuttled from one side to the other as Mr. Obama’s emissary. Fifteen years earlier, he helped craft an agreement between them at the Wye Plantation in Maryland on behalf of President Bill Clinton.
Persons: Martin S, Barack Obama, Gahl Hodges Burt, Indyk, Obama’s, Bill Clinton Organizations: State Department of Locations: East, United States, Israel, New Fairfield, Conn, Australian, Wye, Maryland, Jerusalem, Kippur
For 10 months, Britain’s Conservative government had moved almost in lock step with the United States in its response to Israel’s war in Gaza. Now, under its new Labour government, Britain is edging away from its closest ally on the conflict. By the end of this week, Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected to drop the previous government’s objections to the International Criminal Court prosecutor’s pursuit of an arrest warrant for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, two people briefed on the government’s deliberations said. Taken together, these steps show a government that is willing to pile more pressure on Mr. Netanyahu for Israel’s harsh military response in Gaza. It also shows that Mr. Starmer, a former human rights lawyer, is paying more heed to international legal institutions than the United States.
Persons: Keir Starmer, Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel, Netanyahu, Starmer Organizations: Conservative, Labour, International, United Nations ’, UNRWA Locations: United States, Gaza, Britain, Israel
Prince Harry’s marathon quest against Britain’s tabloids produced a “monumental victory” in the courts, he said in a TV interview that will air Thursday, but it was a “central piece” of the bitter rift between him and other members of the British royal family. Speaking for the first time since winning hundreds of thousands of pounds in damages from Mirror Group Newspapers over his claims that it had wrongfully invaded his privacy, Harry, 39, said that he had been vindicated by the judge’s ruling, even if the price to his relations with his family was high. “I’ve made it very clear that this is something that needs to be done,” Harry said in excerpts released by ITV News, part of an hourlong documentary about the phone-hacking scandal. But he added, “It would be nice if we, you know, did it as a family.”Harry, the younger son of King Charles III, did not explain exactly how his legal battle had further ruptured relations with his father or brother, Prince William. In his memoir, “Spare,” he attributed the rift to multiple causes, including his family’s treatment of his wife, Meghan Markle, a biracial American former actress.
Persons: Prince, Harry, “ I’ve, ” Harry, King Charles III, Prince William, , Meghan Markle Organizations: Mirror Group Newspapers, ITV News Locations: American
Follow our Olympics coverage in the lead-up to the Paris Games. The Paris Games will have more programming hours on the NBC broadcast network than any previous Olympics. NBC is upping its celebrity presence for its Olympic coverage in Paris, headlined by Snoop Dogg. “Research shows that it is a challenge to keep viewers after 10 p.m. ET,” NBC Olympics producer Rob Hyland said. NBCUniversal owns the U.S. media rights to the Olympic Games through 2032, so Paris (2024), Milan-Cortina (2026), Los Angeles (2028) and Brisbane (2032).
Persons: Peacock, Molly Solomon, NBC’s, , ” Solomon, Solomon, Snoop, Snoop Dogg, Christian Petersen, Kelly Clarkson, Peyton Manning, Mike Tirico, Alex Cooper, Leslie Jones, Kevin Hart, Kenan Thompson, Colin Jost, Cooper, Simone Biles, Manning, Ryan Crouser, Jones, Katie Ledecky, Sha’Carri Richardson, Lily Collins, Anna Hall, Ledecky, LeBron James, Sydney McLaughlin, Kelly Campbell, Peacock’s, Scott Hanson, Andrew Siciliano, Jac Collinsworth, Matt Iseman, Akbar Gbajabiamila, , Al Michaels, Mark Lazarus, Sanya Richards, Ross, Rowdy Gaines, Tim Daggett, Laurie Hernandez, Samantha Peszek, Misty, Julie Foudy, Dwyane Wade, LaChina Robinson, Michael Phelps, Dan Hicks, Gaines, Maddie Meyer, they’ll, Rob Hyland, Andres Cantor, Rebecca Lowe, Craig Melvin, Ahmed Fareed, Damon Hack, Maria Taylor, Cara Banks, Laura Britt, Trenni Casey, Lindsay Czarniak, Carolyn Manno, Kathryn Tappen, John Roethlisberger, “ John, He’s, , breaststroker Lilly King wagged, Ryan Murphy, Sunny Choi, Victor Montalvo, Joe Gesue, Ron Vaccaro, NBCU, it’s, NBCUniversal, Rick Cordella, Dan Goldfarb, Stuart Franklin Organizations: Paris, NBC, Paris Games, U.S, Tokyo Olympics, Olympics, NBC Olympics, NBC’s, Getty, NBC Sports, Tokyo Games, Beijing, Games, USA, CNBC, Golf Channel, Telemundo, Universo, NBCOlympics.com, , , NFL, NBCUniversal Media, Paris La Défense, Research, Olympic, Grand Palais, Concorde, NBC Sports ’, Olympic Games, Cortina Locations: Paris, Beijing, Pyeongchang, South Korea, Central, Pacific, U.S, Paris ”, Teahupo’o, Tahiti, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, China, Rio, Tokyo, Peacock, United States, Versailles, Grand, London, Russian, Norway, South Carolina, Milan, Los Angeles, Brisbane, French
Carlos Alcaraz is looking to defend his Wimbledon men’s singles title on Sunday when he takes on seven-time champion Novak Djokovic. Both players have won a grand slam each since that unforgettable final and are now one win away from increasing their tallies. How to watchThe final is set to begin at 9 a.m. E.T on Sunday, July 14, on Wimbledon’s iconic Centre Court. Alcaraz serves against Medvedev in the semifinal match on Friday. Alcaraz bravely joked with the crowd after his semifinal that “Sunday is going to be a good day for Spanish people.”
Persons: Carlos Alcaraz, Novak Djokovic, Alcaraz, Djokovic, Margaret Court, E.T, Alex de Minaur, Jacob Fearnley, Alex Popyrin, Lorenzo Musetti, John Walton, Garros, Francisco Cerúndolo, Roger Federer’s, , ” Djokovic, “ He’s, ” Alcaraz, Alexander Zverev, Mark Lajal, Aleksandar Vukic, Francis Tiafoe, Ugo Humbert, Tommy Paul, Daniil Medvedev, Clive Brunskill, , “ Daniil, I’ve Organizations: CNN, Wimbledon, Court, ESPN, Roland, BBC, Alcaraz, Medvedev, Cincinnati Masters, ATP, Garros, national football team Locations: SW19, Alcaraz’s, Spain, England
Whether “football’s coming home” is as unpredictable as ever. But in England, watching this weekend as its men’s national soccer team comes within touching distance of glory, the dreaming and dreading seem less anguished this time around. Three years ago, in the deadly grip of the coronavirus pandemic and the acrid wake of Brexit, England suffered a heartbreaking loss to Italy, on penalty kicks, in the final of the European championships in London. England’s run through that Covid-delayed tournament had lifted a country that badly needed it. The team’s unofficial anthem, “Three Lions,” swelled in pubs and living rooms across the country, offering the hope, however far-fetched, that after five decades of tournament disappointments and 14 months of lockdowns, “football’s coming home,” as the lyrics of the song go.
Persons: , , “ football’s Organizations: national soccer, Lions Locations: England, Brexit, Italy, London
It was a carefully staged display of big-power theatrics — or more precisely, of middle-power-meets-big-power theatrics. “You are now connected to Air Force One,” said a White House operator, as Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain hunched over a speakerphone, in a short video released on Saturday by 10 Downing Street. Prime Minister, congratulations,” said President Biden, who was flying to Wisconsin for a campaign rally. “What a hell of a victory!”The two leaders spoke warmly about the importance of the “special relationship” between Britain and the United States, their shared commitment to defending Ukraine and an upcoming rendezvous: Mr. Starmer is leaving on Tuesday for Washington, where Mr. Biden is hosting a NATO summit.
Persons: , Keir Starmer, Mr, Biden, Starmer Organizations: Air Force, NATO Locations: White, Wisconsin, Britain, United States, Ukraine, Washington
Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain will barely get his feet under the desk in 10 Downing Street before he flies to Washington this coming week to attend a NATO summit. A week after that, he will play host to 50 European leaders at a security meeting at Blenheim Palace, the birthplace of Winston Churchill. It’s a crash course in global statecraft for Mr. Starmer, Britain’s first Labour prime minister in 14 years. But it will also give him the chance to project an image of Britain that is uncharacteristic in the post-Brexit era: a stable, conventional, center-left country amid a churning tide of politically unsettled allies. In Washington, Mr. Starmer will encounter President Biden, who is resisting calls to abandon his race for re-election because of age-related decline.
Persons: Keir Starmer, Winston Churchill, It’s, Starmer, Britain’s, Biden, Emmanuel Macron, Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany Organizations: NATO, Labour Locations: Washington, Blenheim, France
On Today’s Episode:Labour Party Wins U.K. Election in a Landslide, by Mark Landler, Megan Specia and Stephen CastleMajor Democratic Donors Devise Plans to Pressure Biden to Step Aside, by Kenneth P. Vogel, Theodore Schleifer and Lauren HirschHurricane Beryl Gains Strength as It Bears Down on Yucatán, by Jovan Johnson, Emiliano Rodríguez Mega and Eric NagourneyF.B.I. and Justice Department Open Criminal Investigation in Chinese Doping Case, by Michael S. Schmidt and Tariq Panja
Persons: Mark Landler, Megan Specia, Stephen, Kenneth P, Vogel, Theodore Schleifer, Lauren Hirsch, Jovan Johnson, Emiliano Rodríguez Mega, Eric Nagourney F.B.I, Michael S, Schmidt, Tariq Panja Organizations: Labour, Stephen Castle Major Democratic, Biden, Justice, Investigation
Polls have predicted that the election could be a major turning point, with the center-left Labour Party expected to unseat the right-wing Conservative Party, possibly with a crushing landslide. Credit... Andrew Testa for The New York TimesImage Portsmouth town center. Credit... Andrew Testa for The New York TimesImage England flags and election posters for the Reform U.K. candidate on Kingston Road, Portsmouth. Credit... Andrew Testa for The New York TimesSome formerly stalwart Conservative supporters said they were rethinking their vote. But others defended the Conservative Party.
Persons: , , Sam Argha, Andrew Testa, Penny Mordaunt, King Charles III, Ms, Mordaunt, Liberal Democrats —, Grahame Milner, Milner, Mr, Tracy Patton, It’s, Daisy Quelch, Kiran Kaur, Quelch, Margaret Thatcher, Nigel Farage, Andrew Revis, Kerry Harris, Shanice Bakes, gestured, Harris Organizations: Conservative, Labour Party, Conservative Party, Portsmouth, The New York Times, The New York, Labour, Liberal Democrats, Conservatives, Navy, Residents, National Health Service, European Union, Reform, Reform U.K Locations: Portsmouth, strollers, Britain, England, Southsea, Dixie’s, Kingston, Credit, Ukraine, Iceland
Voters go to the polls in Britain on Thursday in a dyspeptic mood, many of them frustrated with the Conservative government but skeptical that any replacement can unravel the tangle of problems hobbling the country. Their skepticism is warranted, according to analysts. Even if the Labour Party wins a robust majority in Parliament, as polls suggest, it will confront a raft of challenges, from a torpid economy to a corroded National Health Service, without having many tools to fix them. The Labour leader, Keir Starmer, would inherit a “legacy of ashes,” said Robert Ford, a professor of political science at the University of Manchester. And voters, who less than five years ago elected the Conservatives in a landslide, are not likely to give Mr. Starmer much slack to turn things around.
Persons: Keir Starmer, , Robert Ford Organizations: Conservative, Labour Party, Health Service, Labour, University of Manchester, Conservatives Locations: Britain
Keir Starmer is all but certain to become the next prime minister of Britain, after an exit poll projected that his Labour Party would win the general election in a landslide on Thursday. That would mean Mr. Starmer would replace Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who took office less than two years ago. Mr. Starmer, a 61-year-old former human rights lawyer, has led a remarkable turnaround for the Labour Party, which just a few years ago suffered its worst election defeat since the 1930s. He has pulled the party to the political center while capitalizing on the failings of three Conservative prime ministers. “He’s not going to set hearts racing, but he does look relatively prime-ministerial.”
Persons: Keir Starmer, Starmer, Rishi Sunak, , ” Jill Rutter, “ He’s, Organizations: Labour Party, Labour, of, Conservative, New York Times Locations: London
The British Election
  + stars: | 2024-07-03 | by ( Mark Landler | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
But Britain is likely to emerge from the election as an outlier. While the electorates in other countries are shifting to the right, British voters are expected to evict the Conservative-led government after 14 years, in favor of the center-left Labour Party. In today’s newsletter, I’ll explain why Britain is zigging while others are zagging. It included harsh budget cuts after the financial crisis of 2008, the Brexit vote of 2016, the Covid pandemic and a revolving door of prime ministers. Liz Truss lasted less than 50 days after the financial markets turned savagely against her proposed tax cuts.
Persons: Nigel Farage, David Cameron, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak Organizations: Conservative, Labour Party Locations: Europe, Americas, Britain
Keir Starmer, the leader of Britain’s Labour Party, nodded sympathetically as a young mother recalled, in harrowing terms, how she had watched closed-circuit television footage of the fatal stabbing of her 21-year-old son, whose heart was pierced with a single blow. “Thank you for that,” a somber Mr. Starmer said to the woman and other relatives of victims of knife attacks, as they stood around a wooden table last week, discussing ways to combat violent crime. “It’s really, really powerful.”It was not the most feel-good campaign event for a candidate the week before an election that his opposition party is widely expected to win. But it was entirely in character for Mr. Starmer, a 61-year-old former human rights lawyer who still behaves less like a politician than a prosecutor bringing a case. Earnest, intense, practical and not brimming with charisma, Mr. Starmer finds himself on the cusp of a potential landslide victory without the star power that marked previous British leaders on the doorstep of power, whether Margaret Thatcher, the 1980s free-market champion, or Tony Blair, the avatar of “Cool Britannia.”
Persons: Keir Starmer, nodded, Starmer, “ It’s, Margaret Thatcher, Tony Blair, Organizations: Britain’s Labour Party
Total: 25