PM highlights importance of UK and Ireland relationship
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has reiterated the importance of having a "good and constructive" relationship with Ireland, adding he was grateful for its government's support.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has reiterated the importance of having a "good and constructive" relationship with Ireland, adding he was grateful for its government's support.
Destroyed stockpile was to be used by Russian Black Sea Fleet, says defence ministry
"This is what's known as telling on yourself," one Twitter user commented.
Leaders of the New York Young Republican Club told HuffPost they kept the rally tiny on purpose.
Labour’s lead over the Conservatives has more than halved in the past week, the latest opinion poll suggested as a Tory pollster warned against bringing Boris Johnson back.
No evidence has emerged that Russia or the Wagner Group have given its soldiers drugs. But it's not the first time Ukrainian soldiers have wondered about it.
Trump's campaign said it was compiling "millions and millions" of signatures to denounce a possible indictment, while also asking for more cash.
Police Scotland is under pressure to act after Nicola Sturgeon disclosed she and her husband had not yet been spoken to as part of an investigation into alleged missing SNP funds.
GAELEN MORSERep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) cautioned MAGA-diehards who plan to protest against Donald Trump’s possible indictment after the former president repeatedly called on his supporters to take to the streets.In a rare move, the MAGA-loving congresswomen split from Trump’s call for nationwide protests, worried that such events could be hijacked and turn violent.“There are a lot of concerns about protests because of people like Ray Epps and Scaffold Commander,” Greene told The Daily Be
The Good Liars troll a right-wing network known for its fealty to the former president.
Suella Braverman 'invites' Labour MP - Marsha de Cordova - to "apologise to the nation" for "campaigning" to stop the government from deporting "a serious foreign criminal". The home secretary takes questions in the Commons on her immigration plan following her visit to Rwanda over the weekend.
Labour is responding by saying it is nothing more than a sticking plaster. In his article in the New Statesman in which he announced his missions, Sir Keir Starmer decried the “sticking plaster politics” of the Government. The terms of trade are being set down.
Three-month extension of energy price guarantee welcomed but key state support schemes expiring
Just when there are more important things to be debated, it appears the Commons will again be distracted by party feuds, says Guardian columnist Simon Jenkins
Ukraine is now getting warplanes, although not the coveted U.S.-made F-16s it has been pushing for. In what counts as another milestone in the West’s willingness to increase security assistance to the war-ravaged nation, NATO members Poland and Slovakia announced last week they will jointly be donating their entire inventory of Soviet-era MiG-29s to Ukraine.
Brett Rojo/USA Today Sports via ReutersDonald Trump’s call into a Christian nationalist group’s prayer session was derailed Monday night, leaving the former president frustrated after the interview was flooded with “trolls,” the group’s leader claimed.The snafu comes as a possible Trump indictment looms and the former president turns to the MAGA-faithful for support while demanding they “protest” nationwide.A few minutes after joining the Pastors for Trump’s “prayer call”—which also featured lon
Vladimir Putin has bet his own and his country’s future on starting the biggest war in Europe for generations.
The potential challenger to the former president makes a slight dig as rumours swirl about a potential indictment
Watch: The Institute for the Study of War's latest analysis of the Ukraine war as Russia struggles to make tactical gains
Britain is ready to help Poland fill its air defence gaps caused by Warsaw sending some of its MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine, the Armed Forces minister has said.
MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Kremlin told officials involved in preparations for Russia's 2024 presidential election to stop using Apple iPhones because of concerns that the devices are vulnerable to Western intelligence agencies, the Kommersant newspaper reported. At a Kremlin-organised seminar for officials involved in domestic politics, Sergei Kiriyenko, first deputy head of the presidential administration, told officials to change their phones by April 1, Kommersant said, citing unidentified sources.