How special was Thursday night?
In just two games, we saw the 26th night in NBA history with multiple 50+ point games.
The reigning MVP dropped a career-high 55 in OKC’s 2nd straight 2OT win.
Aaron Gordon couldn’t miss, splashed 10 3s and…

How special was Thursday night?
In just two games, we saw the 26th night in NBA history with multiple 50+ point games.
The reigning MVP dropped a career-high 55 in OKC’s 2nd straight 2OT win.
Aaron Gordon couldn’t miss, splashed 10 3s and…

As we head deeper into fall and toward the holiday season, your little one may start to exhibit symptoms like a runny nose, cough, or fever. But with the overlap between the common cold, influenza (the flu), respiratory syncytial…

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Another Italian duo, second-seeded Valentina Gottardi & Reka Orsi Toth advanced to the round of 12 from Pool B. 23rd-seeded American qualifiers Carly Kan & Devanne Sours pushed them deep into the overtime of the tie-breaker in their first-leg…

Water confined in nanoscale channels has dramatically different electrical properties from bulk water, researchers at the University of Manchester have demonstrated. The differences, which include up to 100,000-fold greater conductivity…

Something is rotten in Swedish theatre. In front of Elverket – a former power station that for much of the last 30 years has been at the centre of Stockholm’s experimental dramatic output – posters proclaim that theatre is dead. Inside the…

A new JAMA Insights review synthesizes evidence on

Nigel Farage has suggested he would replace the governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey, if he were to become prime minister.
“He’s had a good run, we might find someone new,” Farage said in an interview with Bloomberg’s The Mishal Husain show.
“He’s a nice enough bloke,” the Reform leader added.
However, Farage is unlikely to have a say in Bailey’s leadership, given the governor’s single eight-year term is due to end in March 2028 and the prime minister, Keir Starmer, is only required to hold a general election sometime before 15 August 2029.
Farage has been calling for politicians to have greater influence on the central bank, which was made independent in 1997 by the then chancellor, Gordon Brown.
His comments on Bailey’s position are the latest sign that Farage could seek to follow in the footsteps of his friend Donald Trump’s relationship with the US Federal Reserve.
Trump has sought to increase his administration’s influence over the US central bank, which like the Bank of England makes its interest rate decisions independently. The US president has demanded interest rate cuts and launched stinging attacks on the Fed’s chair, Jerome Powell – calling him a “moron” on social media – and threatening to remove him.
Farage’s latest comments come just weeks after he and Reform UK MP Richard Tice held a meeting with Bailey at the Bank’s Threadneedle Street headquarters.
Farage had been calling for the central bank to halt bond sales and cut the interest rate it pays to UK banks, after an exchange of letters, in which the governor agreed to a meeting.
Tice, Reform’s deputy leader, has previously said the Treasury should be allowed to appoint “one or two” government representatives to sit on the Bank’s rate-setting monetary policy committee (MPC).
The Reform UK leader, who previously worked as a commodities trader, has worked more recently as a brand ambassador for a gold company, and has discussed his goal of making London a global “powerhouse” for cryptocurrencies.
Farage, who has previously called Bailey a “dinosaur” for his views on digital currencies, said he was encouraged by the governor’s change of heart about stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency that is supposed to have a stable value, such as US$1 (£0.75) per token.
“The Bank of England, the British government, the regulator – whatever shape that takes – they’ve all got to understand the world is changing, has changed, very, very rapidly,” Farage said.
After Bailey’s meeting with Farage and Tice, a Bank of England spokesperson said the governor had “a productive meeting” with them.