COVID-19: The worst GDP since the invention of GDP. The question is, what happens next?
The worst GDP since the invention of GDP.
Exodus of foreign workers ‘a threat to UK recovery’Construction, care and hospitality industries all at risk from major shortage of employees, say business leaders The government could fail to meet its target to build 300,000 homes a year because of a potential shortage of workers in the construction industry. Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images
Austrian authorities have suspended inoculations with a batch of AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine as a precaution while investigating the death of one person and the illness of another after the shots, a health agency said on Sunday. "The Federal Office for Safety in Health Care (BASG) has received two reports in a temporal connection with a vaccination from the same batch of the AstraZeneca vaccine in the district clinic of Zwettl" in Lower Austria province, it said.
Everyone aged 56 and over will be invited for jabs this week, NHS England has announced. Hundreds of thousands of letters for those aged between 56 and 59 began landing on doorsteps on Saturday. The latest round of invitations comes after eight in 10 people aged 65 to 69 took up the offer of inoculation. More than 18 million people in England - more than a third of the adult population - have already received a vaccine. Across the UK, more than a million people have received both doses of a Covid-19 vaccine, while almost 21.4 million people have had one dose. Dr Nikki Kanani, NHS England national medical director for primary care, said: "It is testament to our incredible staff that we can now move on to the next age group. The vaccines are both safe and effective, so if anybody who is eligible hasn't been vaccinated yet, I'd urge them to go online or call 119 and get themselves booked in."
"I find it ridiculous."
The Duchess of Sussex “went mental” at her personal assistant for ordering blankets that were the wrong shade of red, it has been claimed. Meghan, 39, is said to have had “unattainably high demands” causing untold tensions with her Kensington Palace staff. When she hosted a shooting party at Sandringham for Prince Harry’s friends, shortly after their engagement, she allegedly told her PA, Melissa Touabti, to order red, personally embroidered blankets for each of the guests. A source told the Sunday Times: “When they arrived, they weren’t the right shade of red for Meghan and she went mental at Melissa.” Ms Toubati is said to have left “traumatised” by the Duchess’s alleged behaviour and left the Royal Household six months after the Sussexes’ wedding, amid claims she had been reduced to tears.
General counsel wrote a letter to the White House ‘respectfully’ declining to resign before she was eventually removed from her post
Labour will oppose the Government's decision to freeze the income tax personal allowance just days after the shadow chancellor claimed it would not “stand in the way”. In a major U-turn, Lisa Nandy, the shadow foreign secretary, yesterday said the party would vote against the “stealth” tax raid because it was “absolutely the wrong time” to be squeezing lower and middle income workers’ earnings. However, in a later interview, she refused to rule out raising the top rate of income tax if Labour won power, stating only that “we’d look at that closer to the time.” Confirming the latest reversal on Sky News, Ms Nandy said Labour had been “really concerned when those plans were announced” because the freeze to personal allowances would hit the incomes of workers a year before corporation tax is due to increase. “We think that now is absolutely the wrong time to be targeting low and middle income earning families for tax hikes and squeezing their incomes, not least because if you do that it means that they're not going out and spending on the high streets and the economy,” she added. It came just three days after shadow chancellor Anneliese Dodds claimed the party would not oppose the policy because it would be more targeted at “better off people”. "In the future we’re not going to oppose change to that personal allowance,” she said on Thursday last week. “When that takes place it’s going to have more of an impact on better off people than worse off people.” Mr Sunak announced on Wednesday that the personal allowance and higher rate threshold for income tax would rise in April to £12,570 and £50,270 respectively, before remaining frozen until 2026. A series of other personal allowances will also be frozen, with the freeze on income tax thresholds raising £19bn for the Treasury over four years, as more people are dragged into higher rates of tax as wages rise. A number of economists and respected think tanks have described the freeze as “fair” and “progressive”, adding that the greatest burden will fall on wealthier earners. But after a backlash from hard Left MPs over Ms Dodds’ comments, Ms Nandy said on Sunday that the party would now vote against the freezes. Speaking to Times Radio later in the day, she repeatedly refused to say how Labour would raise the £19bn to help pay down the spiralling debts accumulated during the pandemic, stating only that those with the “broadest shoulders” should pay the most. Asked if Labour could reintroduce the 50p higher rate of income tax, she said: “We’d look at that closer to the time. The time right now is a time for helping the country through what is still a crisis.”
Education secretary said teachers were among public sector workers set to face "pay restraint".
Exclusive: Chancellor has only done ‘half the job’, warn NHS bosses as they call for waiting time targets to be suspended
The sister of Richard Ratcliffe, Dr Rebecca Ratcliffe, discusses the family reaction to the news that Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has had her ankle tag removed as she completed her five-year prison sentence. While speaking in Hampstead, Ms Radcliffe said that now was the time that the Government needs to act to get her home and reunited with her family.
Morgan has criticised the duke and duchess of Sussex multiple times in recent weeks
More than third of Scottish voters less likely to vote for cutting ties with rest of UK after events of recent days
‘Population immunity’ to flu and other viruses may have been impacted by Covid health measures, government adviser says
It comes as those aged 56-59 are being invited to join the cohort of the population being offered a Covid-19 vaccine.
Broadcaster shared a tribute to his sister on social media
The Duchess of Sussex “called all the shots” when it came to managing her own media, royal sources have said, casting doubt on her claim she could not be interviewed by Oprah Winfrey three years ago. Multiple royal sources have told The Telegraph the 39-year-old former actress “had full control” over her media interviews and had personally forged relationships not only with Ms Winfrey, but other powerful industry figures including Vogue editor Edward Enninful. In a teaser clip released from the Sussexes’s interview with the US chat show host, due to be aired in the US on Sunday, the Duchess said it felt “liberating” to be able to speak and accused the Royal family of effectively gagging her and taking away that choice. “It’s really liberating to be able to have the right and the privilege in some ways to be able to say yes, I’m ready to talk, to be able to make a choice on your own and be able to speak for yourself,” the Duchess said. In the clip, the Duchess and Ms Winfrey reference the fact that a royal aide was listening in to their first phone call in February 2018, although it is understood the pair had spoken privately before then. What time is Meghan and Harry's interview with Oprah, and how can I watch it in the UK?
'Caroline Flack: Her Life And Death' is due to air on Channel 4 soon.
No European Union country has a bigger stock of AstraZeneca (AZ) vaccines or has used a smaller percentage of its stock than Italy. Rome, with European Commission permission, stopped a shipment of 250,000 of the Oxford University jabs leaving the EU for Australia. The ban was a rebuke to the British-Swedish pharmaceutical firm, which Brussels accuses of breaking its contractual obligations, which AZ denies. In January it cut supplies to the EU in the first quarter to 40 million doses from the 90 million in the deal, and said it would cut deliveries by another 50 per cent in the second quarter. The EU has lagged far behind the UK, US and Israel in rollout, which it blames on supply shortfalls. Italian prime minister Mario Draghi aims to use AZ to speed up vaccinations as his country gears to face a third wave. He is expected to lift age restrictions and follow Britain's lead in having a longer gap between first and second jabs to increase the number having at least one shot. But a new YouGov survey of 1,029 Italians found that almost a quarter (23 per cent) would refuse the AZ jab and demand an alternative.
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"I've got a bone to pick with you actually."