When Kemi Badenoch used prime minister’s questions this week to echo Elon Musk’s demands for a new inquiry into sexual grooming gangs, the MPs behind
Author: Sarah Mitchell
UK government to crack down on MPs earning extra cash from media firms
MPs would no longer be able to rake in huge sums that can see them more than double their parliamentary salaries by signing contracts with
Yoon Suk Yeol to miss start of South Korea impeachment trial on safety grounds
South Korea’s suspended president, Yoon Suk Yeol, will not attend the first hearing of his impeachment trial next week because of safety concerns, his lawyer
Kobbie Mainoo ‘can be so much better’, says Amorim amid uncertain future
Ruben Amorim has warned Kobbie Mainoo to not believe the hype that he is the “finished article” and to focus on improving, amid negotiations over
Reeves’ drive for growth seeks China lifeline after UK market turmoil
Rachel Reeves hailed a new era of “respectful and consistent future relations with China” as pressure grew on the embattled chancellor to deliver on her
Sudan’s army recaptures Wad Madani from rebel Rapid Support Forces
Sudan’s military and its allies have taken back a strategic city from the rebel Rapid Support Forces, officials said. The recapture of Wad Madani, the
Sam Moore was more than a Soul Man – he was one of the 20th century’s great live performers
Sam Moore had put out a Christmas album in 1998, but it wasn’t until 2006 that he released his debut solo album proper. There was
Venezuelan opposition candidate accuses Nicolás Maduro of coup
The man widely believed to be the real victor of last year’s presidential election in Venezuela has accused Nicolás Maduro of staging a coup and
‘It’s the moment when genius comes into the universe’: the film recreating SNL’s chaotic first night
There is no show in history more obsessed with its own lore than Saturday Night Live. Almost every week the long-running sketch show is sprinkled
Black boxes on crashed South Korean plane cut out before impact, inquiry finds
Flight data and cockpit voice recorders on the Jeju Air plane that crashed in South Korea in December, killing 179 people, stopped recording about four