Starmer: This must be a summer of change
Sir Keir Starmer calls for a “summer of change” ahead of the general election on Thursday saying, “the fight for change is for you, but change will only happen if you vote for it.”.
Sir Keir Starmer calls for a “summer of change” ahead of the general election on Thursday saying, “the fight for change is for you, but change will only happen if you vote for it.”.
Poll shows the Conservatives have closed their gap behind Labour to 15 points, the smallest lead for Sir Keir Starmer’s party for a month
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer celebrates being the “only positive campaign left standing” ahead of polling day on Thursday. .
Sir Keir Starmer visited Banbury in north Oxfordshire, ahead of the UK general election this week.
Sir Keir Starmer said he would be willing to work with Marine Le Pen's far-right party if it wins the French election, saying "that's what serious government is about".
The media cliche goes that throughout this election, Sir Keir Starmer has resembled a museum curator transporting an antique across a polished floor. The analogy is unfortunate. The formidable Ming dynasty ended in a dribble of weak and remote leaders who were mercilessly manipulated by court eunuchs, before finally imploding in 1644.
Good evening. Josh here to take you through the day’s news.
There is a story that Sir Keir Starmer’s friends like to tell about his response to Labour’s humiliating Hartlepool by-election defeat in 2021.
Les Bleus leave it late to reach quarter-finals
KEIR Starmer has said he will work with Marine Le Pen's right-wing National Rally party on small boats if they end up forming the next French government.
The Labour Party’s blueprint for Britain promises tax increases of £8.3 billion and the recognition of a Palestinian state.
An officer in Utica, New York, shot and killed a 13-year-old on Friday night after police say he fled and pointed a replica handgun at them.
The MSNBC host revealed how the former president's case could be back in court sooner than anyone realizes.
Thank goodness it’s nearly over. Six weeks of half truths, obfuscation, false hopes and downright lies delivered by tieless, shirt-sleeved leaders in a variety of factories, building sites or sports grounds in front of audiences made up principally of party activists clad in hi-vis jackets. Apart from Ed Davey, that is, who has preferred to campaign in theme parks.
I’ve said it before, and will doubtless have cause to say it again: Boris Johnson might be the single most effective political illusionist this country has ever seen. No matter how many times experience fails to live up to the promise, there still seems to be no shortage of buyers for the could-have-been king act.
“Nigel!” “Niiiige!” “Hey, Nige, can I get a selfie?” “You could be prime minister next week!” “Nigel, good on you, mate!”
Ex-PM claims Labour will be ‘most leftwing government since the war’ at Tory election rally in National Army Museum
Today, we bring you the latest news from Ukraine, look at how Russia has been blamed for jamming GPS signals on British military jets and ask quite why Belarus - a country hosting Russian nuclear missiles - is rattling the nuclear sabre once more.
The Conservatives are forecast to lose more than half the seats they won in 2019 and on track to slump to 53 MPs, based on figures released just a fortnight before election day.
Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez suggested that desperate times call for desperate measures, as she looks to stop the Supreme Court from continuing what she views as an "assault on democracy"
Rishi Sunak has revealed his favourite meal is sandwiches.