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  • Andrew allowed to keep Falklands medal despite losing royal and military titles | Andrew Mountbatten Windsor

    Andrew allowed to keep Falklands medal despite losing royal and military titles | Andrew Mountbatten Windsor

    He has lost his princehood, dukedom, Order of the Garter knighthood and military titles, but the former Duke of York, now Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, can at least keep his campaign medal awarded for active service during the 1982 Falklands…

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  • Today’s top news: Occupied Palestinian Territory, Sudan, Chad, Hurricane Melissa

    Today’s top news: Occupied Palestinian Territory, Sudan, Chad, Hurricane Melissa

    #Occupied Palestinian Territory

    UN agencies launch catch-up immunization campaign for children in Gaza amid humanitarian scale-up

    The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says that the UN and its partners are…

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  • UK's FTSE 100 clinches new record close; focus on BoE, earnings – Reuters

    1. UK’s FTSE 100 clinches new record close; focus on BoE, earnings  Reuters
    2. UK’s FTSE 100 defies global sell-off on healthcare gains and pound weakness  Reuters
    3. Selloff halted as stocks rebound  FXStreet
    4. London midday: FTSE flat, avoids broader market selloff.  investments.halifax.co.uk
    5. FTSE 100 closes higher as US markets rally after tech falls  London Evening Standard

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  • Leanne Morgan’s late-stage comedy glow-up at 60 couldn’t have come at a better time

    Leanne Morgan’s late-stage comedy glow-up at 60 couldn’t have come at a better time

    Most comics are used to getting better with age but not necessarily bigger. Though having just turned 60 years old, one of comedian Leanne Morgan’s funniest jokes about herself is about just how big she’s gotten —not iin terms of her…

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  • Deputy Secretary-General’s remarks at the Closing of the Private Sector Forum [as prepared for delivery] | Secretary-General

    Excellencies, Distinguished delegates, Ladies and gentlemen,

    What a day this has been.

    Let me begin by expressing my deep gratitude to our co-hosts: UN DESA, the UN Global Compact, and the International Organization of Employers, for bringing us together. To every panelist, speaker, and participant who contributed today: your insights and commitment have made this forum what it was meant to be.

    The energy in this room, the honest conversations we’ve had, the solutions you’ve shared.

    Three decades after Copenhagen, we’re not here to repeat old promises. 

    We’re here because every business leader like you in this room today understands something fundamental: business can be the most powerful engine for social development, but only when it’s guided by principles that put people and planet at the centre.

    To that end, today revealed four truths that we cannot afford to ignore. 

    Four principles that should guide everything we do when we leave Doha.

    First truth: Skills without markets are promises we can’t keep.

    We know the possibilities that open up with education, training, and lifelong learning. But we have to stop preparing people for jobs that will soon no longer exist and start preparing them for the jobs that may not even exist yet. 

    Education disconnected from market realities is a betrayal of young people and of workers trying to adapt. It also leaves employers scrambling for skilled talents and undermines efforts to build future-ready economies.

    We should be intentional about connecting what people learn to what markets need. 

    The second truth is that responsible business conduct builds the world your business needs.

    We heard compelling examples today of companies embedding human rights into operations, engaging with workers, ensuring decent work and living wages across supply chains, letting environmental standards guide their decisions. 

    What these stories revealed is that when the work environment is a fair one, when you invest in labour rights, fair wages, and safe conditions, you enhance productivity, strengthen the foundation of your business stands on. 

    You’re also laying a stronger foundation for stable societies that benefit everyone. 

    The Ten Principles of the UN Global Compact on human rights, labour, the environment and anti-corruption provide the roadmap for this approach. 

    Third truth: Inclusive business models scale because they are profitable, not because they’re ‘nice to have’.

    The companies making real impact aren’t treating inclusion as a corporate social responsibility box-ticking exercise. It’s part of the DNA of their core business. These models succeed because they’re solving real problems for real people. When you scale solutions that generate inclusive employment, including addressing the needs of workers in the informal economy, you are reducing vulnerabilities across communities and societies – and that’s smart business. 

    Fourth, and finally: finance flows to what we value, so let’s amplify those values.

    Small and medium enterprises are the backbone of every economy, yet so many – especially those led by women, young people, persons with disabilities, older persons and marginalized groups – can’t access the capital they need to grow. 

    Technology is changing that. A woman entrepreneur in a rural village can now access credit through her mobile phone. 

    A young innovator can sell products directly to customers halfway around the world through e-commerce. 

    Financial literacy that once required a bank branch now reaches people wherever they are. 

    Technology isn’t just bridging the divide – it’s creating opportunities that never existed before, lowering barriers that once kept millions locked out.

    When we expand financial inclusion, when we align investment with social objectives, use blended finance and impact investing to channel resources toward enterprises that deliver both economic and social returns, we are unlocking growth that’s been sitting there, waiting.

    Ladies and gentlemen, 

    So here’s what we do when we leave Doha.

    We go beyond acknowledging these truths and make them the principles that drive our actions.  

    We dig deep. 

    We connect education systems to today’s and tomorrow’s labour market realities. 

    We make responsible conduct non-negotiable across our operations. 

    We scale the inclusive models that are profitable. 

    We open up finance to the entrepreneurs who will drive the next wave of growth.

    The Doha Political Declaration calls for renewed solidarity and collaboration. What that means in practice is this: business, government, civil society, UN entities – all of us working together and acknowledging the final truth that underscores everything we have discussed today – none of us can do this alone. 

    This forum should be a launchpad, so let’s make sure we deliver.

    Thank you.

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  • Tesla sales in Germany have cratered from last year, data shows

    Tesla sales in Germany have cratered from last year, data shows

    Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla Inc., arrives at the Tesla plant in Gruenheide, Germany, on March 13, 2024.

    Krisztian Bocsi | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Tesla sold just 750 electric vehicles in Germany for October 2025, less than half of what it sold a year ago, according to data out Wednesday from the country’s federal transport authority, known as KBA.

    In October last year, Tesla sold 1,607 EVs in Germany.

    KBA data shows 434,627 new battery electric vehicles year to date, the KBA data said, up nearly 40% from the same period last year. Of those EVs, 15,595 were Teslas, a decline of 50% for Elon Musk’s automaker this year.

    Tesla operates a massive vehicle assembly plant in Brandenburg, Germany, which is outside of Berlin, but the company is not a hometown favorite.

    Musk’s incendiary political rhetoric and endorsement of AfD, Germany’s extremist, anti-immigrant party, have weighed on left-leaning consumers’ interest in the Tesla brand there.

    Tesla also faces a passel of European and Chinese competitors throughout Europe offering smaller and more affordable EVs, many priced below 35,000 euros.

    During October, Tesla began selling a new, lower-cost version of its Model Y SUV in Germany. The stripped-down version of the SUV was priced at 39,990 euros for the German market — about 5,000 euros lower than the cheapest, previously available versions of the Model Y there.

    It remains to be seen whether Tesla’s new, lower-priced model variants can help revitalize demand for their EVs in Germany or Europe.

    Policy changes ahead may lift EV sales in Germany, overall.

    Germany scrapped incentives to boost purchases of fully electric vehicles about two years ago, a policy change that led to a sharp drop in demand for fully electric vehicles, initially. The country is now poised to start up a new EV incentive program that goes into effect in January 2026, and is intended to help lower- and middle-income buyers adopt zero tailpipe emission vehicles.

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  • Just a moment…

    Just a moment…

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  • Save $300 on a 65-Inch LG 4K Smart TV Thanks to Today's Deal – PCMag

    1. Save $300 on a 65-Inch LG 4K Smart TV Thanks to Today’s Deal  PCMag
    2. Deals for Today: The Best Gaming TV Setup Deal Drops Before Black Friday  IGN
    3. LG’s G5 65-inch OLED 4K TV is the most affordable it’s ever been  The Verge
    4. LG 75-inch QNED 90 gets…

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  • US Starbucks workers prepare to strike if contract is not finalized by next week | Starbucks

    US Starbucks workers prepare to strike if contract is not finalized by next week | Starbucks

    Unionized Starbucks baristas voted to authorize an open-ended strike ahead of Starbucks’s high-traffic holiday season, announced Starbucks Workers United on Wednesday.

    The union said workers are prepared to strike if a contract is not finalized by 13 November, which is the company’s Red Cup Day, and strike actions could hit more than 25 cities and escalate if there is a lack of progress.

    Starbucks Workers United, which represents more than 9,000 workers out of Starbucks’s over 200,000 baristas, has filed more than 1,000 charges against Starbucks for alleged unfair labor practices to the National Labor Relations Board, the union said.

    Michelle Eisen, a spokesperson for the union who left Starbucks after a 15-year career at the company, said in a statement: “If Starbucks keeps stonewalling, they should expect to see their business grind to a halt. The ball is in Starbucks’ court.”

    The Starbucks Workers United union, had been in talks with the company since last year, and said in October it will vote on picketing in about 60 cities, demanding a contract that reflects “improved staffing, better pay and on-the-job protections”.

    Both sides blame the other for ending talks late last year and say they are ready to return to discussions.

    Starbucks said in a statement that “any agreement needs to reflect the reality that Starbucks already offers the best job in retail.”

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  • SXSW 2026 Illustrator Josh Cochran Wants You to Join the “Wild” Party Ahead

    SXSW 2026 Illustrator Josh Cochran Wants You to Join the “Wild” Party Ahead

    When he’s not transforming blank city walls on the streets of New York and Los Angeles into beautiful murals, illustrator Josh Cochran is creating vibrant, densely layered scenes for the likes of The New…

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