Jose Mourinho: My coaching methods second to nobody
Tottenham manager Jose Mourinho says his coaching methods are "second to nobody in the world" following a 2-1 defeat to West Ham.
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."
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.
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.
General counsel wrote a letter to the White House ‘respectfully’ declining to resign before she was eventually removed from her post
Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage said on Saturday he would step down as the leader of Reform UK, the rebranded Brexit Party he launched two years ago to campaign for what was commonly known as "no deal Brexit". Farage, who as leader of the eurosceptic UK Independence Party (UKIP) applied pressure on the government to hold the 2016 EU referendum, said the Brexit Party had helped the Conservatives "come to their senses" and chose Boris Johnson as their leader with a pro-Brexit agenda.
The Royal family will assume the brace position as it awaits a stream of damaging revelations by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex in their Oprah Winfrey interview. The slickly produced, dramatic teasers quashed any lingering hopes that the couple might stick to more mundane and diplomatic subject matters. Instead, they will tell “their truth”, lifting the lid on life behind palace walls in a manner no member of the family has done for decades. The couple intend the interview to draw a line under their grievances and mark the end of that chapter of their lives, allowing them to finally look to the future. But in reality, the issues that they raise, the allegations they make, are expected to be explosive, with potentially serious and long-term implications for the monarchy.
‘Democrats are passing Covid relief And Republicans are reading Dr Seuss’ says one reply
Exclusive: Appointments to be cancelled and new slots unavailable in east Midlands, ahead of significant supply boost in following week
Last month Boris Johnson made his long-awaited speech to Parliament and announced a number of key dates for reopening Britain. The Government has always said that reopening schools would be the priority when lockdown is eased, with Monday previously set as the target date. According to a statement from the National Education Union, a full return would mean 10 million pupils and staff travelling to and from school each day.
More than third of Scottish voters less likely to vote for cutting ties with rest of UK after events of recent days
A crowd of Trump supporters clashed with counter-protesters in New York City on Friday, March 5, as they gathered to unfurl a large ‘Trump 2024’ banner.This video originally uploaded by Jarrett Robertson shows a large crowd waving the banner and chanting “Trump ’24” before marching through the streets of Manhattan.According to the New York Police Department one officer was injured and taken to hospital “for suspected bleach being thrown in his eyes” while attempting to prevent clashes between “anti-police protesters and pro-Trump protesters”.The police department also said four people were arrested at the protest, including assaults on police officers and weapons possession. Credit: Jarrett Robertson via Storyful
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?
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Broadcaster shared a tribute to his sister on social media
An undersea tunnel between Great Britain and Northern Ireland will move a step closer this week when a Government review recommends a feasibility study into it. A major Union Connectivity review is expected to say that civil servants should formally appraise the plans for “a fixed link” between the two islands, most probably between Stranraer in Scotland and Larne in Northern Ireland. The review by Network Rail chairman Sir Peter Hendy is also expected to recommend a major upgrading of road and rail links between the four nations of the UK. The undersea tunnel – details of which were first disclosed by The Telegraph last month – has already won the enthusiastic private backing of both Boris Johnson, who first proposed a fixed link across the Irish Sea in 2018, and Alister Jack, the Scotland Secretary. The link – dubbed ‘Boris’s burrow’ – would be the same length as the Channel Tunnel and go some way to smoothing the flow of freight between Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Sir Peter is understood to have rejected a bridge between Great Britain and Northern Ireland on the grounds that it may have to be closed for a third of the year due to bad weather. There is also unexploded ordnance on the sea bed dating back to the Second World War which would be a risk to the structure and to the workers building it. The Hendy review is also expected to recommend a major upgrading of road and faster rail links between the four nations of the UK. One government source said: "It is very good news for union connectivity across the United Kingdom." Scottish civil servants in Edinburgh who report to the SNP-led government were told not to engage with the Hendy review, despite the fact that Scots will benefit from it. Concern about the future of the UK has now led to MPs in England setting up a WhatsApp group and working with the Conservative Union Resources Unit to work to preserve it. Conservative MPs south of the Border are keen to work to help shore up the UK if the SNP win power again at May’s Scottish Parliament elections. SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon is expected to use any victory to press the case for an early vote on Scottish independence. The Conservative Union Resources Unit has around 100 members and has started to meet weekly to coordinate efforts to protect the UK from the SNP’s attempts to break it up. Senior Conservative MP Sir Bernard Jenkin said: “It is in all our mutual interests that the SNP is not allowed to destroy the United Kingdom.” Writing for The Telegraph, Sir Bernard said that last week’s Budget, which set up a new UK-wide Shared Prosperity Fund, allowed the Government to show that “it will not abandon the Scots to an incompetent and failing nationalist government”. He said: “The nationalist government in Scotland has become more and more consumed by its separatist obsession. They recently decided to stop flying the Union Flag outside Scottish government buildings. “Preoccupied by divisive gestures, they are careless of the real needs of Scots, for their jobs and financial security. “Instead of supporting the UK connectivity review, which promotes improved rail and road links between the North of England and Scotland, they instructed their officials to refuse to cooperate.” He added: “The record of the present nationalist administration strengthens the case for Scotland remaining in the UK, and for strengthening partnerships across the UK. The strongest argument for the UK is shown by this Budget. “It increases support for Scotland, despite the objections of the nationalists. It has also inspired confidence in the UK, and so in Scotland too, across the entire world, despite the way the pandemic has ravaged the public finances.” Separately Scottish Conservative leader Douglas Ross is set to accuse the SNP government of "breaking accountability to parliament". In a speech being delivered on Monday, he will say the Scottish Parliament must be empowered to hold the executive to account. Speaking to the Onward think tank, Mr Ross is due to say: "This sorry episode has undermined trust in the First Minister and in her government, but it has also shaken confidence in our Scottish Parliament. "The Parliament has been tested to its limits in its ability to hold the SNP government to account and it has been found wanting. "That is not the fault of individual parliamentarians but of a structure which has given the SNP all of the cards it needs to frustrate the opposition. "By deliberately breaking the accountability of government to parliament, the SNP are damaging devolution and the institution that gives them the authority to govern Scotland’s public services."
‘Population immunity’ to flu and other viruses may have been impacted by Covid health measures, government adviser says
She accused critics of the Duchess of being racist
Exciting detail gave many fans ‘goosebumps’
Trump was enraged that his name and likeness had been used to raise money for organisations that would then help reelect Republican members of Congress who voted to impeach him
Chris Wilder holds a press conference after Sheffield United's Premier League 2-0 defeat to Southampton. The relegation-haunted Blades were unable to build on their morale-boosting midweek win against Aston Villa, which offered a glimmer of hope that they might be able to pull off the greatest of escapes.