Starmer: Govt needs to get in room and negotiate
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer says the government should get in the room and negotiate to prevent nurses going on strike. .
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer says the government should get in the room and negotiate to prevent nurses going on strike. .
Three years since the UK officially left the European Union, the promised benefits, particularly in the tech world, have yet to materialise.
The council has made cuts in its delivery of free food recycling bin bags as part of efforts to reduce its budget spend.
Here are some stargazing tips for viewing comet C/2022 E3 not seen since the Stone Age as it reaches its brightest THIS WEEK.
Police have promised “cultural change” and apologised to the families of victims in the Hillsborough disaster. Ninety-seven people died as a result of a crush at an FA Cup semi-final match between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest on 15th April 1989 at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield. The National Police Chiefs Council and the College of Policing apologised on behalf of all 43 police forces in England and Wales in response to a 2017 report by former Bishop of Liverpool James Jones.
Hadleigh Fire Station station closed back in 2009, before being converted into an artist and studio space.
Ryan Reynolds says that being a co-owner of the football club Wrexham is the "greatest experience" of his life.
Two of the officers are reportedly planning to plead not guilty to their charges
Teachers are taking strike action in February, find out everything you need to know about if schools will be closed and what to do.
Paul Long said that he will lose £250 in earnings as he has to look after his children when their teachers strike.
Bonham Carter is one of Britain’s biggest acting exports
Falmouth Town manager Andrew Westgarth was pleased to add another three points despite a below-par performance on Saturday.
A TikTok video viewed hundreds of thousands of times claims that the United States has waived all in-person interviews for Kenyan travellers seeking visas. According to the clip, all travellers must do is deliver the necessary papers and await their visas. However, the claim is misleading: the United States has waived in-person interviews for some travellers seeking to renew certain types of visas, but not all of them.“No more visa interviews for 2023… so keep all the documents ready to submit,”
A beach camera captured a major rockfall at the cliffs near West Bay, England, on January 18, after a period of heavy rain made them unstable, according to Dorset Council.The camera, owned by the UK Environment Agency, filmed the moment a large chunk of the East Beach cliffs fell onto the beach below.The cliffs where the collapse occurred have been made famous by UK detective drama Broadchurch.Dorset Council told residents to keep away from the base of cliffs and to stay well away from the edge along the top. Credit: Environment Agency via Storyful
The husband-and-wife team who founded one of Britain's biggest privately owned educational resources providers are close to sealing a deal that will propel them into the ranks of the country's richest entrepreneurs. Sky News has learned that Jon and Susie Seaton, who established Twinkl in 2010 in a bedroom in their Sheffield home, are in advanced talks with the private equity firm Vitruvian Partners about the sale of a minority stake.
Action by teachers, civil servants, Border Force staff and train drivers to go ahead, with ministers accused of ‘stonewalling’
Police believe they are still in the country and fear they could be sleeping rough in a tent
Rishi Sunak has insisted he "acted pretty decisively" in sacking Nadhim Zahawi over the weekend.
Prosecutors in Suriname on Tuesday asked a court to uphold a 20-year-sentence against former strongman Desi Bouterse over the deaths of 15 political prisoners in 1982.On Tuesday, Attorney General Carmen Rasam formally asked the High Court of Justice to uphold the guilty verdict and the 20-year sentence.
Teachers and train drivers are among half a million workers walking out today on the biggest strike day seen in Britain for more than a decade. Civil servants, university lecturers, bus drivers and security guards will join picket lines, while protests are set to be held across the country against the government’s controversial plans to legally enforce minimum service levels during strikes. Downing Street said 600 military personnel as well as civil servants and volunteers across government have been trained to fill the gaps in public services.