When I go to the login page, my username and password are autofilled, but clicking the login button produces no response.
If I delete the contents of both autofill boxes and then give permission to my device's request to fill the username and password, the login button works as it should.
Tried clearing cache and cookies with no Beehaw or Lemmy pages open. Removing login details from saved passwords and entering them manually works, but only as a onetime thing. Saw a suggestion that a shorter password might work but bit wary of this without further guidance.
It wouldn't be super noticeable, but am getting logged out several times a session when browsing via phone.
~~EDIT: May have just created a duplicate of this question, as this post wasn't showing up from my profile or from the community. The second one isn't showing, but could appear soon! Apologies for that.~~
FURTHER EDIT: discovered that when I get logged out, if I open a new tab to Beehaw, I'll be logged in on that tab without. This is so easy that it doesn't count as awkward, and my settings make it very obvious visually whether am logged in or not.
UK Labour's position on Gaza is no different to that of the Tories (or to the DNC in the US). In Scotland, the SNP is strongly pro-Gaza, but were wiped out. That's likely to have been in matters besides Palestine, but voters had the option to prioritise it and roundly rejected it. In NI & Wales, pro-Gazan candidates did less considerably less well than predicted 18 months ago. A few pro-Gazan candidates ran for the Workers' Party - a handful of them won seats, but others, including their party head lost theirs. Meantime far-right Reform loathe Israel & loathe Palestine more, but made massive gains.
In France, pro-Gazan FI is a major component of NFP, the alliance which got the biggest vote share, but they only scraped that by working strategically with the rest of the left & with the neolibs to see off the far-right, and even this alliance did not win a majority. Within this there's little to no agreement on Palestine, and FI's position drew in some voters and alienated others.