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Another New Dawn? What Starmer's Team Can Learn From 1997's New Labour
Veterans of Labour's 1997 victory party at the Royal Festival Hall by the end the dancefloor looked like a war zone strewn with dozing bodies - will remember the sense of disbelief and excitement as the scale of the landslide started to materialise.
All Eyes On Biden At Nato Summit As Leaders Brace For Trump Presidency
As European leaders and top defense officials from 31 Nato countries descend on Washington tomorrow, all eyes will be focused firmly on Joe Biden, whose faltering performance at last month's debate has added to concerns about the country that some Europeans already described as their "unpredictable ally".
Most Of NHS In England 'Is Failing To Take Obesity Seriously Enough'
Much of the NHS does not take obesity seriously enough, despite it being an unfolding health disaster that costs Britain £98bn a year, according to a report.
Surprise Surge For Left Pushes French Far Right Into Third Place
Exit polls suggest no single group has won an absolute majority
The Show Must Go On ... After The Penalties: James Corden Delays Play To Let Audience Watch England Win
For a few minutes on Saturday evening, the country held its breath as England's finest footballers lined up for a penalty shootout against Switzerland in the Euro 2024 quarter-finals in Düsseldorf.
Historic Hamilton thrills on way to ninth home victory
Mercedes driver shows mastery in wet conditions to end 945-day winless run
'I'm so proud he's a Lancastrian' - diehard fans pay their tributes to legend Anderson
Supporters see their favourite son show he has lost none of the old magic despite his Test career coming to an end
Kick or twist Smith's costly misses should force rethink for England in game of shrinking margins
Anyone who has ever played sport knows that desperate sinking feeling. One minute the world is a wonderful place and you are doing what you love most.
Royal Mail to go ahead with freight flight cuts in spite of takeover
The boss of Royal Mail's parent company has said the business will push on with a \"transformation\" of the group despite its £3.57bn takeover, as it prepares this month to cut more daily freight flights.
Rob Burrow Celebratory farewell for rugby league inspiration
Children in full rugby kits play cheerfully in front of the Featherstone Lions rugby club in Pontefract as adults sporting bright jerseys drink, eat and chat joyfully.
Baverman is losing support as potential party leader, say Tories
Conservatives have suggested that the former home secretary Suella Braverman is losing support as a potential future party leader, as Tory MPs who lost votes across southern England privately urged colleagues to resist a lurch to the right.
Flying start Lightning trip begins reset of relationship with Europe
It felt like a deeply symbolic, even cathartic, moment on Saturday lunchtime as, on take off from Stansted, the pilot carrying the new foreign secretary, David Lammy, banked the government plane with the Union Jack livery sharply leftwards across the sodden and half occluded fields of Essex and towards Europe.
Lammy seeks EU security pact on defence, energy and climate crisis
Labour is seeking a sweeping joint declaration with the EU to usher in a wide-ranging security pact covering defence, energy, the climate crisis, pandemics and even illegal migration, the foreign secretary, David Lammy, has said.
Fiscal rules Borrow more to invest, says Unite leader
The head of Unite, Sharon Graham, has put immediate pressure on the Labour government to change its fiscal rules so it can borrow more to invest in infrastructure and public services.
'We were so scared' Uncertainty ahead, but for now there is relief
A nervous energy rippled through the crowd gathered at Lyon's Place de la République.
Watchdog for children to visit Manston asylum centre
The children's commissioner for England is due to visit Manston, the Home Office centre in Kent where small boat arrivals are processed, after concerns were raised about the treatment of children there, the Guardian has learned.
Reeves promises to 'fix foundations' for growth
Rachel Reeves has pledged to \"fix the foundations\" of the British economy, revealing in her first speech as chancellor an immediate plan to boost growth by unblocking infrastructure and private investment.
House prices remain flat but cuts to mortgage rates offer hope of more upbeat market
UK house prices have remained \"subdued\" for a third month in a row, according to a leading lender, but a recent run of mortgage rate reductions is offering hopes of improvement in the market.
Trophy hunting The politics of saving the super tuskers
In the borderlands of Tanzania and Kenya, the \"super tuskers\" roam.
Orbán's 'peace mission' to Moscow condemned by fellow EU leaders
Viktor Orbán, Europe's most proRussia leader, met Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin yesterday, in a rare trip to Moscow that drew strong condemnation from European leaders.
Holds barred Time called on cuddling koalas for the camera
From Taylor Swift to King Charles, cuddling a koala in Australia has long on bucket-lists for celebrities, politicians and tourists alike.
Jordan Kingdom faces 'tricky balancing act' over Palestine
Last week, under the blazing summer sun, a crowd marched through central Amman, waving placards and flags.
Timeline The week that sparked a wave of panic in the Democratic party
History may record them as eight days that sank a presidency, or at least as forming the rockiest road to a convention in living memory - a week that left Joe Biden's reelection bid hanging by a thread.
Biden launches media blitz to counter health fears and salvage US presidential bid
Joe Biden was gearing up yesterday for a three-day public relations blitz aimed at salvaging his floundering presidential candidacy after a week of disarray caused by his disastrous debate performance against Donald Trump.
'We can click together' England seek redemption in Düsseldorf
The talk among the English, in recent days, has been of change. After a period of chaos and instability, where nothing appeared to be working, there was a chance to turn the page. Would the opportunity be taken? Would Gareth Southgate switch to three at the back?
Glastonbury is a bit woke, says Gallagher as he urges bands to 'stop yapping'
Noel Gallagher, long a champion of leftwing political causes such as the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, has decried Glastonbury festival as \"getting a bit woke now\".
Dawn meetings and discipline How Labour stuck to its programme and secured victory
As the election campaign entered its final week, staff at Labour headquarters were treated to a surprise guest.
'Bad hand played poorly' How Sunak let No 10 and Brexit legacy slip from his grasp with wayward strategy and own goals
Rishi Sunak became Britain's prime minister quickly and unexpectedly in October 2022 after the short, financially catastrophic premiership of Liz Truss and the leadership of Boris Johnson, whose loose moral compass had allowed Downing Street to party while the rest of the UK was locked down.
Independence Election points to lack of voter appetite for a second push
The general election result is a catastrophe for John Swinney and the Scottish National party, which has dominated politics in Scotland for a decade.
Farage heckled and party called racist at first speech as MP
Nigel Farage was yesterday heckled by anti-racism protesters at his first event in London since his election where he said he would \"professionalise\" Reform UK and displace the Conservatives as the voice of opposition.