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A report has called for greater oversight of social media platforms to protect MPs from abuse and intimidation.

The Speakers Conference, a cross-party group of MPs, has put together recommendations to address the “current climate of toxic political discourse”.

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The recommendations include the introduction of an elections code of practice by Ofcom, the media regulator, and new legislation under the Online Safety Act to address emerging threats such as disinformation, deepfakes, and doxing.

Sir Lindsay Hoyle, Speaker of the House of Commons and chair of the conference, said: “Standing for election and representing your community is something anyone should be able to aspire to.

“But the current climate of toxic political discourse is having a corrosive effect on our democracy, and is discouraging people from participating in our democratic process. The perception that it is acceptable to abuse public figures must end.”

The report also calls for a review of how misogynistic abuse is treated under hate crime legislation and urges political parties to provide tailored support for female candidates.

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It advocates for improved citizenship education in schools and a national public awareness campaign to challenge the normalisation of abuse towards MPs and promote respectful political engagement.

Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle speaks during Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons, London. Picture date: Wednesday February 1, 2023
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Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle speaks during Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons, London. Picture date: Wednesday February 1, 2023

It also includes recommendations for greater media regulation, including encouraging politicians and the press to participate more in long-form interviews to avoid over simplification and misrepresentation of stories.

Sir Lindsay said: The Speaker’s Conference report makes clear recommendations to government, the police, the media and wider civil society on how we can uphold freedom of speech and ensure accountability, while reducing threats and ensuring greater security for candidates, MPs and our democratic institutions.

“The onus is on all of us to moderate political discourse and ensure it does not cross the line into abuse, intimidation or violence. I will continue to work with all relevant groups to protect and defend our democracy.”

The Speaker’s Conference was formed last year and was brought together to consider specific topics. It has similar powers to select committees and can request documents, call witnesses and take oral and written evidence.

The conference published its first report in June which made recommendations on how the response to threats against MPs, candidates and elections can be strengthened.

This report found that 96% of MPs surveyed had experienced abuse, and nearly half of their staff had felt unsafe as a result of abuse.

The second phase of work focused on “what can be done to reduce the level of threat posed to MPs and candidates”.

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Bitcoin to end four-year cycle, break out to new highs in 2026: Grayscale

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Bitcoin to end four-year cycle, break out to new highs in 2026: Grayscale

Bitcoin’s latest pullback may already be bottoming out, with asset manager Grayscale arguing that the market is on track to break the traditional four-year halving cycle and potentially set new all-time highs in 2026.

Some indicators are already pointing to a local bottom, not a prolonged drawdown, including Bitcoin’s (BTC) elevated option skew rising above 4, which signals that investors have already hedged “extensively” for downside exposure.

Despite a 32% decline, Bitcoin is on track to disrupt the traditional four-year halving cycle, wrote Grayscale in a Monday research report. “Although the outlook is uncertain, we believe the four-year cycle thesis will prove to be incorrect, and that Bitcoin’s price will potentially make new highs next year,” the report said.

Bitcoin pullback, compared to previous drawdowns. Source: research.grayscale.com

Related: Cathie Wood still bullish on $1.5M Bitcoin price target: Finance Redefined

Still, Bitcoin’s short-term recovery remains limited until some of the main flow indicators stage a reversal, including futures open interest, exchange-traded fund (ETF) inflows and selling from long-term Bitcoin holders.

US spot Bitcoin ETFs, one of the main drivers of Bitcoin’s momentum in 2025, added significant downside pressure in November, racking up $3.48 billion in net negative outflows in their second-worst month on record, according to Farside Investors.

Bitcoin ETF Flow, in USD, million. Source: Farside Investors

More recently, though, the tide has started to turn. The funds have now logged four consecutive days of inflows, including a modest $8.5 million on Monday, suggesting ETF buyer appetite is slowly returning after the sell-off.

While market positioning suggests a “leverage reset rather than a sentiment break,” the key question is whether Bitcoin can “reclaim the low-$90,000s to avoid sliding toward mid-to-low-$80,000 support,” Iliya Kalchev, dispatch analyst at digital asset platform Nexo, told Cointelegraph.

Related: Strategy unveils new credit gauge to calm debt fears after Bitcoin crash

Fed policy and US crypto bill loom as 2026 catalysts

Crypto market watchers now await the largest “swing factor,” the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision on Dec. 10. The Fed’s decision and monetary policy guidance will serve as a significant catalyst for 2026, according to Grayscale.

Markets are pricing in an 87% chance of a 25 basis point interest rate cut, up from 63% a month ago, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

Interest rate cut probabilities. Source: CMEgroup.com

Later in 2026, Grayscale said continued progress toward the Digital Asset Market Structure bill may act as another catalyst for driving “institutional investment in the industry.” However, for more progress to be made, crypto needs to remain a “bipartisan issue,” and not turn into a partisan topic for the midterm US elections.

That effort effectively began with the passage of the CLARITY Act in the House of Representatives, which moved forward in July as part of the Republicans’ “crypto week” agenda. Senate leaders have said they plan to “build on” the House bill under the banner of the Responsible Financial Innovation Act, aiming to set a broader framework for digital asset markets.

The bill is currently under consideration in the Republican-led Senate Agriculture Committee and the Senate Banking Committee. Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott said in November that the committee planned to have the bill ready for signing into law by early 2026. 

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