NEWS OF THE WEEK: Kendall Jenner shares body image struggles after SKIMS photoshoot backlash
Kendall Jenner shared her body image struggles after her SKIMS photoshoot was heavily criticised.
Rishi Sunak is plotting a new tax on online deliveries next month and a raid on the self-employed later this year, The Telegraph can reveal. The Chancellor will use Wednesday's Budget to announce a £5 billion fund to help high street pubs, restaurants and non-essential shops that have remained closed as a result of the Covid lockdown. On March 23 – dubbed "tax day" in Whitehall – he will then unveil a series of consultations on further tax increases to start paying for the £300 billion cost of dealing with the virus crisis. The Telegraph has learnt that this will include options to tax online retail more heavily, including the possibility of a new green tax on every internet delivery, alongside other online tax ideas. However, it is understood that he has turned his back on a mooted windfall tax on the "excess profits" of internet companies. Mr Sunak is also planning to use a Budget in the autumn to increase National Insurance Contributions paid by Britain's 4.5 million self-employed, arguing that they too benefited from state support in the pandemic. A Treasury source said: "The idea of an online sales tax is being looked at as part of the business rates review. "Responses to the consultation are being considered in the round, but the Chancellor is cognisant of the need to level up the playing field between the high street and online taxation."
People across the country enjoyed temperatures of up to 15C on Saturday.
Mary Miller started her term as an Illinois representative on 3 January 2021
Aidy Bryant reprised her role as the Texas senator
The UK has reported another 290 coronavirus deaths and 7,434 new cases, while 19.6 million people have now had their first vaccine dose. The UK government has set the target of offering a first coronavirus vaccine to all adults in the UK by the end of the July. Yesterday at the Downing Street press conference, Health Secretary Matt Hancock defended the decision to base the rollout on age, and not prioritising certain professions like teachers and police officers.
Rishi Sunak indicates furlough scheme could remain beyond AprilAhead of Wednesday’s budget, UK chancellor says he would ‘do whatever it took’ to support workersCoronavirus – latest updatesSee all our coronavirus coverage
Late in a December evening Masrat Jan, a 40 year old mother of four from the village of Sangria Barzol in Indian-administered Kashmir, developed sudden chest pain and begged her husband to get her to hospital. Her family rushed her to the nearest hospital. But because it had no cardiac specialists, she was referred to another facility more than another hour’s drive away. She died there five minutes after arrival - a collateral victim, doctors explained, of a draconian security environment. “The Doctors told us if there was an Internet, they could have contacted the cardiologists in Srinagar and stabilized her,” her father, Gul Mohammad Shah, told the Telegraph. “She would have survived had there been an internet service available.” India’s government shutdown internet, mobile phone and landline services in Kashmir before stripping the region of its partial autonomy on August 5, 2019, saying it wanted to stave off civilian protests.
A single-shot vaccine to combat Covid in Britain could be just weeks away, with regulators set to begin the approval process this week. Ministers are expecting the Johnson & Johnson jab – which has been authorised in the US for emergency use – to start formal regulatory approval in the coming days. The UK has ordered 30 million doses, the US 100 million and Canada 38 million. The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), which must carry out the checks for the UK, did not respond to a request for a comment. The development came as reports emerged that just one shot of the Pfizer or Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine reduced the risk of being admitted to hospital by more than 90 per cent. Public health officials have briefed ministers on the new results, according to a report in The Mail on Sunday. Health sources said the jab, developed by Johnson & Johnson's vaccines division Janssen, was not yet being considered by the MHRA for formal approval – a process that normally takes less than two weeks, based on the timelines for Pfizer and Astra Zeneca's jabs. A senior Government source said the MHRA formal process was "very likely" to start this week. The Department of Health and Social Care declined to comment. A department source said: "We are working with them to complete the rolling review process and we look forward to receiving more data from them as soon as possible."
Kim Kardashian West has cited “irreconcilable differences” as the reason she is divorcing rapper Kanye West. The reality TV star filed divorce papers with an LA court that also confirmed she is seeking joint custody of their four children - North, seven, Saint, five, Chicago, three, and Psalm, one. The businesswoman has enlisted the services of lawyer Laura Wasser, who earned the title “disso queen” thanks to her work sorting out the divorces of high-profile celebrities.
Nearly two million people aged 60 to 63 in England are being invited to book a coronavirus jab as part of the continued expansion of the vaccine programme. NHS England said that the letters will start landing on doormats from Monday, explaining how people can make an appointment to get jabbed through the national booking service. They have been sent out after more than three in four people aged 65 to 70 took up the offer of a vaccination, it added. It comes as leaders from 60 of the UK's black majority churches joined forces on Sunday to show their support for the Covid-19 vaccine to their congregations. They will say they support the rollout of the Covid-19 vaccine programme, and urge their congregations to seek out the facts about the vaccine from trusted sources. They will also say that they have either already been vaccinated or that they will get the vaccine when it is their turn. The alliance of Christian leaders, which includes Bishop of Dover the Rt Rev Rose Hudson-Wilkin, said they felt compelled to act after data suggested black people are among those most likely to be hesitant about receiving the Covid-19 vaccine. Bishop Hudson-Wilkin said: "When you are offered the Covid vaccine, please take it. "This is our chance to show we care for ourselves and our neighbours. "Don't let misinformation rob you of your opportunity to protect yourself and others." This initiative has been organised by Christian umbrella organisations Churches Together in England, Evangelical Alliance and YourNeighbour.
Budget 2021: Sunak’s £5bn plan to rescue high streets from collapse. Grants will be offered to stricken shops and pubs but NHS fears its pleas for cash will be ignored
The joy of receiving a note from a member of the Royal Family, in response to a card or a letter, has long been keenly felt by well wishers from across the globe. But the Duke and Duchess of Sussex now face a scramble to make new arrangements for their correspondence after the Prince of Wales withdrew his financial support for the mail service provided by his team at Clarence House. The couple’s decision not to return to the royal fold as working members of the family means that all professional ties will be severed from the end of next month. For practical reasons, that will include arrangements relating to their mail, the Sunday Telegraph understands, meaning that well wishers might have to start posting their cards to the US instead. The Correspondence Section at Clarence House, comprising around four members of staff, has traditionally handled the Sussexes’ mail, as well as that of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall.
Trump has captured the Republican party – and that's great news for Biden. The Trump party is only interested in appealing to its base. Democrats in Washington have the public square to themselves
‘I’ve had my vaccine - how well will it protect me and for how long?’. The latest answers to the important medical questions about the vaccines and the pandemic
Britain’s education secretary Gavin Williamson is relying on “misleading” research to plough ahead with controversial “free speech” plans for universities, an academic has said.
The son of a woman who was killed on a smart motorway has written to Grant Shapps to demand that he reinstate hard shoulders or be held personally responsible for all future deaths of motorists stranded in live lanes. Niaz Shazad launched a withering attack on the Transport Secretary, claiming he will be remembered as a "failure" and the "minister who did nothing" if he refuses to halt the rollout of the roads. Mr Shazad, a chartered accountant who has analysed road crash statistics, claims the Government's insistence that smart motorways are "as safe as or safer than" traditional ones is based on "mathematical sophism" and "Orwellian doublespeak". His mother Nargis, 62, was killed when the car her husband was driving broke down on the inside lane of the M1 in South Yorkshire in 2018. The mother of five was believed to have been attempting to get over the safety barrier when she was hit by her Nissan Qashqai after it was struck by a lorry. Despite the vehicle being stranded for 16 minutes and 21 seconds before the collision, Highways England failed to spot it to close the lane to traffic. The lorry driver was not prosecuted. The case has been referred to the Crown Prosecution Service after a coroner found there was "more than sufficient evidence" for Highways England to be considered for corporate manslaughter charges. It is the first time Mr Shazad, 32, from Sheffield, has commented publicly about his mother's death. His letter asks Mr Shapps to imagine a chilling scenario in which he, his wife and three children break down on a dark night on a smart motorway he has approved where no static vehicle detection technology has yet been installed. Mr Shazad describes lorries "whizzing" past, missing them "by inches", with the chances of being spotted slim because as few as eight staff monitor banks of 450 cameras. Referring to the average time it takes Highways England to notice a stranded vehicle, he writes: "[For] 17 minutes you are going to be sat there, praying and hoping that someone has activated signs behind you" Addressing the minister's claims that he cannot bring back the hard shoulder because it would mean buying land equivalent to 700 Wembley stadia, Mr Shazad adds: "So let me ask you – if, God forbid, you found yourself in a situation similar to the above – would you still believe it too costly to make right what is quite clearly wrong?" Mr Shazad says it was "disingenuous" of Mr Shapps to approve more smart motorways when "vast swathes" of the network still do not have radar meant to detect broken down vehicles.
Clean break: the risk of catching Covid from surfaces overblown, experts say. Prioritising eye protection and face masks will prevent the spread of coronavirus more than disinfecting surfaces, research shows
The stunning full Snow Moon us seen rising over the sea in Sheerness, Kent, in southeast England on Saturday evening (February 27).
Germany and France could approve the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccines for over 65s just days after Angela Merkel said she was too old to take the jab. Thomas Mertens, the head of Germany’s vaccine committee, revealed it would "very soon" update its recommendation on the jab.
Oprah with Meghan and Harry: masterstroke or disaster? . The Sussexes are the latest in a line of celebrities to try to rebuild their image by talking to the chatshow queen