
Sip your morning tea where Churchill once paced, as his former Pimlico home comes up for sale
If you’re looking for a home with political and historical pedigree, you don’t get much better than this five-bedroom residence in a sought-after …
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- Daily Mailflipped into Top Stories
Meet the Chief Constable of common sense: He cites Churchill as an inspiration, doesn't believe officers on duty should take the knee and has almost doubled crimes solved in Manchester in just four years
It's almost two years since a car belonging to councillor Angela Cosgrove's elderly mother was firebombed outside her home in Derker, Greater …
- Express Newspapersflipped into World news
Fury as Keir Starmer's EU net zero surrender threatens Brexit freedoms
Prime Minister wants closer ties with the EU, even if it means rowing back on some of the benefits of leaving the bloc Sir Keir Starmer has been …
OpenAI's $500 billion Stargate venture weighs future UK investment, FT reports
Stargate, the $500 billion U.S. data-centre project funded by SoftBank, OpenAI and Oracle, is weighing a future investment in the UK as it explores …
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- BBC Newsflipped into Top Stories
NHS will be pursued if gender policies don't change, equalities watchdog says
The NHS will be pursued if it does not follow new guidance on single-sex spaces, the chairwoman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has said. Along with other public bodies, the NHS will be receiving guidelines after the UK Supreme Court unanimously ruled a woman is defined by …
- Alan Nishiharaflipped into ALAN NISHIHARA
Can the IRS revoke Harvard's tax-exempt status?
For more than a century, the majority of colleges and universities have not paid most taxes. The Revenue Act of 1909 excused nonprofits operating “exclusively for religious, charitable, or educational purposes” in order to continue acting in the public interest. President Donald Trump is looking to …
- The Independentflipped into Videos
Simon Calder: Why Britons bringing cheese and meat back from Europe could be landed with £5,000 fine
Britons could face a fine of up to £5,000 if they bring back meat or cheese from Europe. Tourists have been warned not to bring dairy products back from Europe, by the UK government. Under new rules, travellers returning to the UK will not be able to bring back beef, pork, lamb, mutton, venison, goat meat or dairy products. The Independent’s travel correspondent Simon Calder explains: “The UK has not previously had a ban on dairy and meat products since Brexit, but now we do have one and it is to do with the concern over foot and mouth spreading in the UK.”