At just 20 years old, Dylan Law recognises that his age sets him apart from most politicians, who he says don’t “come off as very authentic”.
The university student and Green Party candidate, who if the polls are to be believed, is set to become Hackney’s deputy mayor, says the people getting involved in politics from his generation are unlike mainstream politicians, who “speak in ways which seem a bit jargon-y to the average person”.
Law is leading a surge for the Greens in the London borough, where polls indicate they will displace Labour as the biggest political party after the local elections on Thursday. Hackney is one of four London councils that the Greens are expected to take from Labour, according to YouGov.
Shorts – Quick stories
Pornhub to become accessible again for some UK users
Pornhub’s parent company Aylo said Apple users who had confirmed their age with the company’s updated iOS would be allowed back on the site.
Caption: The Pornhub logo is displayed on a smartphone screen with a multitude of pornographic website logos in the background. The pornographic website announces that it blocks its services to new users starting in February 2026 in response to the age verification requirements imposed by the Online Safety Act (OSA), in Creteil, France, on January 28, 2026. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto via Getty Images) Photographer: NurPhoto Provider: NurPhoto via Getty Images Source: NurPhoto Copyright: Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto
What’s the latest?
In February, Pornhub limited access for most UK users unless they had previously verified their age.
Parent company Aylo said Online Safety Act age verification rules had not been fairly applied and refused to join in a flawed system.
Now, it said Apple users who had confirmed their age with the latest iOS update would be allowed on.
Aylo argues device-level checks are the best way to stop young people accessing explicit content.
LIFESTYLE
4 min read
Has the Online Safety Act worked?
Major platforms have been affected by the landmark Online Safety Act, with Pornhub seeing a 75 per cent drop in UK users since the introduction of more robust age checks.
However, critics have questioned whether people are simply using VPNs instead, allowing them to evade age checks by masking their IP addresses.
Caption: BRISTOL, UNITED KINGDOM – FEBRUARY 07: In this photo illustration, a age-restriction warning screen for the adult website Pornhub is displayed on a iPhone digital screen, on February 7, 2026 in Bristol, England. Last year UK communications regulator Ofcom issued guidance under the Online Safety Act that required websites with pornographic material to introduce “robust” age-verification measures for UK users by July 2025. Aylo, the parent company of the website Pornhub, has criticised such age-verification measures, saying they simply force users to darker corners of the web that do not require age checks. (Photo by Anna Barclay/Getty Images) Photographer: Anna Barclay Provider: Getty Images Source: Getty Images Europe
POLITICS
3 min read
Caption: The Princess of Wales during a reception at Buckingham Palace in London, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II’s birth. Picture date: Tuesday April 21, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire Photographer: Jordan Pettitt Provider: Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire Source: PA Copyright: PA
ROYAL
Kate to make first overseas trip since cancer diagnosis
The Princess of Wales is set to make her first official foreign visit since being diagnosed with cancer.
Kate, who revealed she was in remission last year, will travel to Italy next week on a trip with The Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood.
Major milestone for the future queen
Kate’s trip to Italy will be the first official overseas engagement in nearly three-and-a-half years. Her last visit was in December 2022, when she went to Boston, USA, with Prince William for his Earthshot Prize award ceremony.
Caption: (FILES) Prince William and his wife Kate Middleton, Duchess of Cambridge, kiss on the balcony of Buckingham Palace in London, following their wedding on April 29, 2011. Prince William and wife Catherine will celebrate their 14th wedding anniversary on the Scottish island of Mull on April 29, 2025, the latest step on the princess’s road to recovery from cancer. Catherine, Princess of Wales, revealed in January that she was “in remission” having announced last March she had been diagnosed with an unspecified form of the disease and was undergoing chemotherapy. (Photo by JOHN STILLWELL / POOL / AFP) (Photo by JOHN STILLWELL/POOL/AFP via Getty Images) Photographer: JOHN STILLWELL Provider: POOL/AFP via Getty Images Source: AFP Caption: NEW YORK, NY – DECEMBER 08: Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge during a visit to the Northside Center for Child Development on December 8, 2014 in New York City. The royal couple are on an official three-day visit to New York with Prince William also due to meet President Barack Obama in Washington D.C today. (Photo by Mark Stewart – Pool/Getty Images) Photographer: Pool Provider: Getty Images Source: Getty Images North America
She has been on unofficial trips to Marseille, France, for the Rugby World Cup in autumn 2023 and to the Crown Prince of Jordan’s wedding in Amman in June 2023.
What’s on the agenda?
The princess will visit the city of Reggio Emilia in northern Italy for two days from 13-14 May to focus on early years child development.
A Kensington Palace spokesperson said Kate is “very much” looking forward to the trip, where she will learn about the Reggio Emilia Approach, an educational philosophy which focuses on children’s self-development.
Caption: TOPSHOT – Britain’s Prince William, Prince of Wales, and Catherine, Princess of Wales, visit the Harbour Defenses of Boston, Massachusetts, as the city contends with rising sea levels, on December 1, 2022. (Photo by BRIAN SNYDER / POOL / AFP) (Photo by BRIAN SNYDER/POOL/AFP via Getty Images) Photographer: BRIAN SNYDER Provider: POOL/AFP via Getty Images Source: AFP Caption: The Prince and Princess of Wales arriving with their children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis, arriving to attend the Easter Service at St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle, Berkshire. Picture date: Sunday April 5, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Aaron Chown/PA Wire Photographer: Aaron Chown Provider: Aaron Chown/PA Wire Source: PA
Kate’s cancer diagnosis
Kate was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer following abdominal surgery in January 2024, sparking widespread speculation.
March 2024: Kensington Palace announces Kate has cancer and releases a personal message from the princess.
June 2024: Kate releases an update, saying her “treatment is ongoing and will be for a few more months”.
September 2024: The princess announces she is cancer-free after finishing chemotherapy.
January 2025: Kate reveals she is in remission at an official visit to the Royal Marsden, the hosptial where she received treatment.
WORLD
What is Trump’s ‘Project Freedom’ in Strait of Hormuz?
Donald Trump threatens fresh military action as he signals frustration over peace talks with Iran (Photo: Celal Gunes/Anadolu/Getty)
Donald Trump said his operation to guide ships through the Strait of Hormuz will be paused “for a short period of time” due to “great progress” towards a deal with Iran.
Here is all you need to know about “Project Freedom” and what it means for tense relations between Iran and the US.
What’s the latest?
Trump puts ‘Project Freedom’ on hold
Trump has halted the operation to escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz after less than 48 hours.
However, a US blockade of Iranian ports will remain in place.
Trump said the U-turn was at the request of Pakistan and others, and also due to “tremendous” military success and progress towards a deal.
But Iranian state media described the move as a “retreat” after Trump’s “continued failures” to reopen the vital waterway for global shipping.
What is ‘Project Freedom’
Trump announced Project Freedom on Sunday, saying it was a “humanitarian gesture” to help seafarers stuck in the Gulf.
The plan launched on Monday, with US Central Command (Centcom) saying it was “essential” to regional security and the global economy.
Iran responded saying it would attack US forces if they entered the strait.
LIVE
1 min read
LIVE
1 min read
Go deeper on this topic
Is a deal imminent?
Caption: In this picture obtained from Iran’s ISNA news agency on May 4, 2026, vessels are pictured anchored in the Strait of Hormuz off Bandar Abbas in southern Iran. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards on May 4 denied that any commercial ships had crossed the Strait of Hormuz, after the US military earlier said two US-flagged merchant vessels had transited through the vital waterway. (Photo by Amirhossein KHORGOOEI / ISNA / AFP via Getty Images) / Photographer: AMIRHOSSEIN KHORGOOEI Provider: ISNA/AFP via Getty Images Source: AFP
On Friday, Trump said he was “not satisfied” with Iran’s latest peace proposal. Trump has repeatedly called for Iran’s nuclear programme to end, while Tehran has demanded the release of frozen assets. On Tuesday, he said “great progress” has been made on a deal, but it remains to be seen what that looks like.
Analysis
4 min read
Four key takeaways from Starmer’s antisemitism summit
Iran’s attempts to incite antisemitism in the UK “will not be tolerated”, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has said.
Here are the main points from the Downing Street summit.
Caption: LONDON, ENGLAND – MAY 5: Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during a meeting with civic leaders to discuss tackling antisemitism at Downing Street on May 5, 2026 in London, England. (Photo by Hannah McKay – WPA Pool/Getty Images) Photographer: WPA Pool Provider: Getty Images Source: Getty Images Europe
Key takeaways
1Starmer said one of the lines of inquiry is whether a foreign state is behind the attacks.
2He announced £1.5m funding to strengthen community cohesion and protect Jews in at-risk areas.
3Ministers are “fast-tracking legislation” allowing them to ban state threats such as Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps.
4Universities must publish the scale of antisemitism on campus and show how they are tackling it.
Go deeper on this topic
The measures to protect the Jewish community come after the stabbing of two Jewish men in Golders Green and a series of attacks at synagogues and other sites in recent months.
Starmer has faced criticism that he has not done enough to keep the community safe, and was heckled during a visit to the north London suburb on Thursday.
Caption: TOPSHOT – Local residents look on from outside a cordoned off area in the Golders Green neighbourhood of north London on April 29, 2026, following the stabbing to two people nearby. Two people were stabbed on April 29 in north London, Jewish groups said, following a series of arson attacks targeting Jewish sites in the area. A man was arrested after he was seen running with a knife “attempting to stab Jewish members of the public”, the Shomrim Jewish neighbourhood watch said on social media. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP via Getty Images) Photographer: JUSTIN TALLIS Provider: AFP via Getty Images Source: AFP Copyright: AFP or licensors
NEWS
7 min read
Starmer’s message to Iran
One of the lines of inquiry is whether a foreign state has been behind some of these incidents…Our message to Iran, or to any other country that might seek to foment violence, hatred or division in society, is that it will not be tolerated.
SiR KEIR STARMER, PRIME MINISTER
Caption: LONDON, ENGLAND – APRIL 30: Prime Minister Keir Starmer (C) and Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood (CR) meet members of Shomrim, the Jewish community security organisation, in Golders Green following yesterday’s attack on April 30, 2026 in Golders Green, England. A 45-year-old British-Somali man was arrested yesterday, after stabbing two Jewish men, Shloime Rand and Moshe Shine, in a terrorist attack in Golders Green. Both victims are in a stable condition, and the suspect was caught by police after being tasered. The government has since pledged ??25 million to improve security for the Jewish community following the incident. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images) Photographer: Leon Neal Provider: Getty Images Source: Getty Images Europe Copyright: 2026 Getty Images
Co-op is confident it’s stores will be ‘back to normal’ within days (Photo: Chris J Ratcliffe/Reuters)
NEWS
The supermarket using invisible spray to combat shoplifting
Co-op has been secretly marking frequently shoplifted groceries with a special forensic spray to tackle the resale of stolen goods.
Here’s how the invisible spray works, and how the company hopes it will make shoplifting less profitable.
What’s the story?
Co-op has been marking items with an invisible spray that contains a unique forensic code linked to the shop where it was originally sold, according to Retail Gazette.
Retail theft on the increase – woman stealing in UK supermarket. (Photo: Andrey Popov/Getty Images Copyright: Copyright (C) Andrey Popov Caption: A shopper walks along an aisle inside a Tesco supermarket in Manchester, Britain, February 5, 2026 REUTERS/Phil Noble Photographer: Phil Noble Provider: REUTERS Source: REUTERS
Co-op has invested £250m in store security, including body-worn cameras for staff, reinforced kiosks for items such as spirits and tobacco, and shelf fixtures designed to stop thieves sweeping products into bags.
How does the scheme work?
Where?
The scheme has been trialled in Manchester and London and will be rolled out across the UK.
Which items?
High-risk items such as alcohol, laundry detergent and confectionary have been sprayed.
Why?
The aim is to help Co-op and the police identify where stolen products are being resold, making theft less profitable.
More than 300 babies have been born with inflatable forceps, the first breakthrough in childbirth assistance in decades.
It is hoped that the device, called the OdonAssist, could reduce birth trauma. It will be rolled out to 40 hospitals across Britain and Europe.
How new forceps could revolutionise childbirth
Around one in eight people will have an assisted vaginal birth using forceps or vacuum extraction.
Women may have bleeding or tears and marks can be left on the baby.
Inflatable forceps work by surrounding the baby’s head with a soft air cuff, allowing doctors to help remove it more gently.
In trials, patients reported no or low pain in more than 95 per cent of births where OdonAssist was used.
Analysis
5 min read
How ‘gentle’ forceps were invented
From a prototype using a jar and a doll to development by the World Health Organisation (WHO).
The OdonAssist was thought up by a mechanic in Argentina in 2006 called Jorge Odón.
He created the first prototype using a jar, a cloth and his daughter’s doll.
It was then taken up by Mario Merialdi, of the WHO, who refined the idea for clinical use.
It was created by Maternal Newborn Health Innovations, a public benefit corporation to help reduce avoidable pain.
Disillusioned with Labour, some voters say they have been drawn to the Greens due to issues like expensive, shoddy rental housing and Sir Keir Starmer’s stance on the war in Gaza. A Green victory would be a big upset in a council controlled by Labour since 2002.
‘I’m not like George Finch’
If elected, Law would be one of the youngest council leaders in the country. He says he gets attacked for his age by people who say he “can’t run a council” and is “going to be like George Finch” – the UK’s youngest council leader.
Dylan Law is set to become Hackney’s deputy mayor and he’s already facing attacks from people who don’t think he can run a council due to his age (Photo: Alexa Phillips/The i Paper)
Finch, the 19-year-old Reform leader of Warwickshire County Council, who narrowly survived a vote of no confidence in March.
Law says he is more interested in Finch’s choice of party than his birth certificate. “I don’t think it’s right to just blame his age,” he says. “I think he just happens to be that age.”
He says he doubts accusations that he is inexperienced will “stick”. “If we get Hackney Council and run it poorly for years, attack me as much as you want, I’ll take it,” he says.
Law, who is studying business at SP Jain London School of Management, says he’ll have to “figure out” how to balance his course work with running a council. If elected, he plans to discuss his options with lecturers, potentially doing his studies part-time or leaving the course if it’s not feasible.
Law credits a visit to the town hall in Hackney as the experience that got him involved in politics. “I didn’t know what councillors were, and found out what the Labour one stood for – wasn’t exactly my cup of tea,” he says.
A lifelong Hackney resident, he went to academy schools, where he says he was appalled by an effective ban on “Black hairstyles”. He has also lived in council homes throughout his life, where he describes conditions as “humiliating”. He lives with his grandmother, having moved in with her due to overcrowding in his previous family home.
“My personal experience has been poor quality of housing, mainly things like leaks, mould – my ceiling and walls are ripped right now,” he says. “We don’t even bother to call the housing association, because they don’t respond. People pay rent every single month, they pay council tax every single month, and we get nothing out of it.”
Divisions over the war in Gaza and antisemitism allegations
Law says the war in Gaza has had an impact on rising support for the Greens. He says many voters feel the Government has been “too strict on Palestinian activists” and wants the Government to stop supplying arms to Israel.
The party’s pro-Gaza stance has attracted supporters – but also allegations of antisemitism. Last Thursday, two Green candidates standing for Lambeth council in south London were arrested over alleged antisemitic social media posts. Another Green candidate in Newcastle was accused of antisemitism over posts calling for “every single Zionist” to be killed.
Law says he isn’t familiar with these cases, but defends Zack Polanski when asked about the Green leader’s response to the arrest of a man over the stabbing of two Jewish men in Golders Green, north London.
Polanski reposted a message on X accusing officers of “repeatedly and violently kicking a mentally ill man in the head when he was already incapacitated by Taser”. He later apologised, saying police responses “need later reflection in the right forums, but I accept that social media is not the appropriate channel for doing so”.
Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley accused Polanski of amplifying “inaccurate and misinformed commentary”, while Israel’s Deputy Prime Minister said he is an “extremist” who “legitimises violence against Jews”.
Having seen the video of the arrest, Law says there are “a lot of questions to be asked about the Met Police”, adding: “I’ve seen my own friends and some family members be kicked, pinned wrongly”.
Ciara Bains is one of the many people choosing to vote Green over the current Government’s stance on Gaza (Photo: Alexa Phillips/The i Paper)
‘I’m disappointed in Labour’
Despite these controversies, the Greens’ message appears to be resonating with many voters.
Ciara Bains, 29, says she plans to vote Green. She supports plans to make sure the council’s investments don’t support a genocide – as ruled by Amnesty International – in Gaza. “It’s one of the most important things at the moment outside of our own lives here,” she says.
Bains, a project manager, says Polanski, who lives in Hackney, and Zoë Garbett, the Green mayoral candidate and councillor in her ward, are both “actually part of the community”.
The party’s policies on housing – which include improving council homes and supporting rent controls at a national level – appeal to her, too. “My rent is pretty much as much as I could afford in London, and it’s still hard,” she says. “I think they have the goal of keeping that down and keeping it affordable.”
She says she used to vote Labour, but feels disappointed by Labour’s leadership, both locally and nationally, adding: “I don’t feel like they are what they say they are anymore.”
Naomi Filbert cares about the environment and she believes the Greens focus on this more (Photo: Alexa Phillips/The i Paper)
Naomi Filbert, a 27-year-old events worker, is likely to vote Green. “They’re just aligned with things I’m looking for, I guess, just to actually focus a bit more on the environment,” she says. “I think the others claim they are but don’t actually follow up.”
She says mainstream politicians tend to overlook the environment if it “isn’t what’s going to make them money or give them votes”.
‘I’m not voting Green with that idiot in charge’
Others, like Steve Parker, are not convinced. Parker, a 66-year-old retired dustman, plans to vote Reform because he wants “a change” and is “not satisfied with anything at the moment”.
“They may be no good,” he says. “We don’t know, do we? I’m fed up with the run-of-the-mill Labour, Conservatives, and I couldn’t vote Green with the idiot in charge there. He wants to legalise drugs, doesn’t like the royal family.”
Steve Parker is not a voter convinced by the Greens while Zak Polanski leads them (Photo: Alexa Phillips/The i Paper)
A former Tory voter, he says he supports Reform because of pledges to cut immigration.
He says the council has closed some streets to cars, which has increased traffic on the main roads. “Where I live, they’ve shut all the back roads so people who know the area can’t use it as a cut through,” he says.
“They’re saying it’s for cleaner air. What about the poor buggers that live on Graham Road? There’s five times more traffic there, so don’t they count? They can all get carbon monoxide poisoning.”
‘Polanski has a bizarre record’
Bill Bamber, a 74-year-old pensioner, will vote for his independent candidate, who is campaigning against road closures. The former Lib Dem voter says the number of cars near his home has risen tenfold.
“I know that some roads gain and some roads lose,” he says. “Living on a losing road is a bit of a pain and dirty.”
He says he doesn’t think the Greens have their policies “fully worked out”. “It’s irrelevant to the local politics, but Zack Polanski has a rather checkered and bizarre record,” he adds, pointing to his previous claims that hypnosis could increase a woman’s breast size.
Patrick Attaridge isn’t voting for any main party and has decided to vote independent (Photo: Alexa Phillips/The i Paper)
Patrick Attaridge, 73, says he is a lifelong Labour voter. “I think they’re doing a good enough job,” he says. “Everyone can say what they’re going to do when they get in, but unfortunately, it changes when people get in. So I’m going to stick with Labour, give them another chance.”
Matt Lorde, 58, says he has “always voted Labour” and thinks they are “best for this area”. Lorde, who is unemployed, lives in a council home and says the housing association that manages it could be a bit better and “more proactive”, but they “do get things done eventually”.
‘Inexperienced candidates making wild promises’
Mayor Caroline Woodley claims Labour is “greener than the Greens”, who do not have the experience needed to run the council. “They would be bringing in people who have never even served as councillors before to run the council,” she says.
She describes Law as a “very bright and ambitious young man.” “He’s one to watch,” she says. “I think he could be a very talented politician. Do I think he could go straight from never being a councillor to being a statutory deputy mayor? I would find that quite surprising.”
Caroline Woodley is the first woman elected mayor and council leader of Hackney (Photo: Alexa Phillips/The i Paper)
She fears that the council’s work will get “thrown away” by inexperienced candidates “making wild promises and pledges”.
Woodley says they have to remind voters that it’s not a national election, adding that there are “marmite” attitudes towards national party leaders. As the first woman elected mayor and council leader of Hackney, she says she finds herself asking voters not to “judge me based on men in Westminster”.