Foods You Never Realized Were So Expensive
If you’re like most people, you’ve probably experienced a higher-than-expected grocery bill at one point or another.
Pictures from the new episode give hope to Vicky McClure fans.
Thousands could fly to England from India before it joins Covid travel ‘red list’. UK government accused of acting too slowly as fears grow over new variant discovered in subcontinent
If the west is really not interested in pushing back at Russian aggression with equally bold moves, it should give up the pretence that it is serious about taming an increasingly feral Putin
Covid UK: coronavirus cases, deaths and vaccinations today. The latest daily updates on coronavirus cases in your local area and nationally. Check week-on-week changes across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and the latest figures from public health authorities
The Premier League's all-time leading goalscorer Alan Shearer has voiced his opposition to the proposed European Super League, saying that the ESL had "chucked a grenade at the Premier League".
Everyone seems united against the new proposals, but can they really be stopped?
The ‘anti-riot’ bill brought in by Governor DeSantis means fully peaceful protesters can be arrested — yet includes protections for counter-protesters who kill people with their vehicles
France is first EU member state to start testing digital Covid travel certificate. French trial will be extended from 29 April to include vaccination certificates
Well, he's not wrong, is he?
Prime minister brands Irish Sea checks ‘ludicrous’ – despite negotiating and ratifying the agreement
The cyclist suffered five smashed ribs and a broken shoulder blade as well as grazes to his body and face during the attack.
Changes ‘hard earned’ and ‘long awaited’
Political blogger Richard Millett is suing the former Labour leader over remarks he made on The Andrew Marr Show in 2018.
MyPillow CEO pushes debunked election fraud conspiracies during 48-hour ‘Frank-a-Thon’ for social media platform
Pub owner tells Labour leader he has ‘failed to be the opposition’ on Covid-19
More than a third of local areas have seen a week-on-week rise in rates.
Nicola Sturgeon's "bitter and blind hostility" to the UK means she cannot accept the vaccination programme bolsters the case for the Union, the Tories have said after she insisted a separate Scotland would have performed just as well. Donald Cameron, the Tories' health spokesman, accused the First Minister of "delusional nonsense" after she insisted there was "absolutely no evidential basis" to suggest fewer Scots would have been vaccinated outside the UK. Ms Sturgeon was challenged during an STV election interview that no other European country has vaccinated anything like the UK's total, with the Republic of Ireland hoping to complete its over-70s by the end of next month. She said a separate Scotland "could have chosen to procure the way it thought was best" and anybody claiming the situation would have been worse was "basically plucking this out of thin air." Ms Sturgeon insisted a separate Scotland would have fared just as well came after she received her first dose of the Oxford vaccine last week. But a series of her ministers demanded the UK sign up to the EU's vaccine procurement plan last year and expressed outrage when the Prime Minister refused.
The UK has recorded 33 more Covid-19 deaths with 2,524 people tested positive in the past 24 hours. Yesterday the country recorded just four deaths as cases continued to fall with weekend reporting lags usually behind the very low number. The official UK death toll now stands at a total of 127,307.
It is arguably one of the best photographs ever to have been taken of the Duchess of Cambridge. Capturing not only the sombre mood of the occasion but also the steely determination of a family in mourning, Kate’s sorrowful green eyes stared straight down the lens as she was pictured arriving at Windsor Castle for the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral on Saturday. Taken by Getty photographer Chris Jackson, who is married to the Duchess’s stylist Natasha Archer, the extraordinary image revealed the steady yet serious gaze of a Royal whose decade in the monarchy has been characterised by quiet confidence and calm self-composure. Resplendent in the Queen’s pearls, even behind a black face mask, the 39-year-old mother of three managed to exude both style and substance as she was thrust back into the spotlight for her first major Royal event since that Oprah Winfrey interview. Despite having effectively been thrown under a bus by the Duchess of Sussex’s suggestion that she had made her cry during a bridesmaid’s dress fitting – and not the other way round – it was Kate who was the first in the 30-strong congregation to engage Prince Harry in polite conversation following the 3pm ceremony at St George’s Chapel. Having repeatedly looked over at her brother-in-law, seated opposite, during the 50-minute service while both William, 38, and Harry, 36, buried their heads in their orders of service, the woman once cruelly dubbed “Waity Katie” showed just how much she shares what Prince Philip once described as the Queen’s “abundance of tolerance”.
The 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has been trying to guide Myanmar, a member, out of the bloody turmoil triggered by the military overthrow of Aung San Suu Kyi's elected government on Feb. 1. After ASEAN's secretariat announced the summit, Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said he would be represented by his deputy, Don Pramudwinai, who is also foreign minister.