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Newslinks for Sunday 18th August 2024 | Conservative Home

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Tory leadership race 1) Tugendhat: How I’d end the epic Tory infighting

“When Tom Tugendhat became security minister, he was given a badge by one of the senior people in the Home Office labelled “Sheriff Tom”. It sits on his desk now in an otherwise spartan parliamentary office, where Thomas More, the 16th-century lord chancellor (after whom he was named by his Catholic mother) peers austerely down at us. The Tory party needs a new sheriff in town and Tugendhat, 51, is running to be leader for the second time. He finished fifth in 2022 but gave a good account of himself then and won the first debate. Like all the other candidates Tugendhat is calling for unity: “We’ve had epic amounts of factional infighting,” he says.” – Sunday Times

  • Why the next Tory leader must abandon reckless economic nonsense to save Britain – Sunday Telegraph

Tory leadership race 2) Jenrick lays out 10 principles for the future of the Conservatives

“Robert Jenrick has laid out 10 principles for the future of the Conservatives as he seeks to outline a common creed for the party. The Tory leadership hopeful set out his stall with a warning that the Tories must rebuild far more quickly than after their previous landslide election defeat in 1997. In an essay for the Sunday Telegraph, the former immigration minister said political oblivion awaits the Conservatives unless they show the public that they have changed. Mr Jenrick said although his party had failed to deliver in 2019, the Tory brand had also lost its meaning as an identity crisis took hold.” – Sunday Telegraph

Comment

Tory leadership race 3) Patel: We must excel as an Opposition to show Tories can be trusted to govern again

“The Conservative and Unionist Party must act with urgency. We need energy and experience to get us on the road back to government. CCHQ must be reformed to help support an effective Opposition, support our fantastic candidates and embolden our heroic membership. We cannot shy away from the fact that over the past few years, the Conservative Party has lost too many representatives at the local and national level. Every single time we lose a candidate, we lose someone able to make the case for Conservative values. We can’t let this go on.” – Sunday Telegraph

Tory leadership race 4) Badenoch skips northern Tory leadership hustings to go on holiday

“Kemi Badenoch will miss the only Conservative Party leadership hustings to take place in the north of England on Saturday because she is on holiday. The shadow housing secretary has apologised to members for being unable to make the event in Yarm, north Yorkshire, as a result of long-standing family commitments. The panel has been organised by the Northern Conservatives and advertised as “your chance to hear from and question the next leader of the Conservative Party”. – Sunday Telegraph

Extreme misogyny to be treated as terrorism

“Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, has ordered a review of Britain’s counter-extremism strategy to urgently address gaps in the Government’s stance, The Sunday Telegraph can reveal. It will look at tackling violence against women and girls in the same way as Islamist and far-Right extremism, amid fears that current Home Office guidance is too narrow. This could mean teachers will be legally required to refer pupils they suspect of extreme misogyny to Prevent, the Government’s counter-terror programme. It comes after warnings that misogynistic influencers are radicalising teenage boys online.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • ‘We can’t write off working-class people as white trash’ – Sunday Telegraph
Comment

Clapping NHS workers like a ‘national religion’ is dangerous, health watchdog warns

“Clapping the NHS during the pandemic may have had “dangerous” consequences by insulating it from criticism, the health ombudsman has suggested. Rebecca Hilsenrath warned against treating the health service as a “national religion” as she called on its leaders to radically overhaul the culture and listen to those it fails. She also accused the NHS of “doubly traumatising” those who had lost loved ones by refusing to even acknowledge the harm caused.” – Sunday Telegraph

Comment

Labour 1) Labour turns screw on housebuilders for failures on cladding fix

“Angela Rayner’s housing department has launched a searing attack on builders for failing to remove Grenfell-style cladding. The housing minister Rushanara Ali has summoned major developers to a ministerial roundtable after accusing them of dragging their heels when it comes to fixing buildings that have been deemed dangerous. Some 55 companies signed a “developer remediation contract” in 2023 in which they promised to review developments that might feature dangerous building materials — and fix them.” – Sunday Times

Labour 2) Winter fuel savings to be wiped out by £4bn benefits bill

“Labour’s planned savings from scrapping winter fuel payments could be wiped out by an unintended £4bn benefit bill, analysis has suggested. The Chancellor estimated the move, which would restrict payments to people claiming means-tested benefits, would save the Treasury £1.4bn a year. But a report suggests the move could cost the taxpayer up to £3.8bn if hundreds of thousands of retirees rush to claim pension credit in order to qualify for winter fuel payments. An estimated 850,000 eligible pensioners do not currently claim pension credit, according to official figures.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • Reeves’ pension plan could damage the North, says ex-minister – Observer
  • Chancellor accused of burying report on winter fuel payments axe – Sunday Express
  • Train drivers’ pay has grown twice as much as teachers, doctors and soldiers – Sunday Telegraph
  • Striking train drivers to average £80,000 on a four-day week – Sunday Times
  • Tories criticise appointment of second senior civil servant to Labour – FT
  • Starmer accused of treating taxpayers like a cash machine – Mail on Sunday
  • Labour MP took £4,000 donation from train drivers’ union – Mail on Sunday
Comment
>Today:

Labour 3) Starmer on alert as his untold story is about to be released

“One of Britain’s highest profile political biographers is on a mission to expose Sir Keir Starmer’s most closely guarded secrets. Lord Ashcroft, who sent shockwaves through Westminster with his deep dives into the lives of David Cameron and Angela Rayner, is at work on a fully revised edition of Red Knight, his biography of Sir Keir. The famously private PM can expect the political blockbuster to land in the spring – and he will probably await its publication with gritted teeth. Tory peer Lord Ashcroft said: “Three years after the publication of Red Knight, my unauthorised biography of Sir Keir Starmer, I have decided to fully revise and update it.” – Sunday Express

Mystery meeting of cabinet minister and Robinson representative

“A cabinet minister held a private meeting with a key ally of Tommy Robinson, the far-right leader accused of stoking the riots that followed the Southport stabbings. Louise Haigh, the transport secretary, met Sammy Woodhouse, a victim of the Rotherham grooming gang scandal who now works as a “citizen journalist” for Urban Scoop, an alternative news site linked to Robinson. No officials were present at the meeting. It took place on Thursday in Sheffield, where Haigh sits as an MP. The revelation is likely to prompt questions about Haigh’s judgement and could raise concerns about a potential ministerial conflict of interest.” – Sunday Times

  • Robinson explores his options amid HMRC investigation – Sunday Times

Farage: I have always been extremely hardworking. That’s how I combine broadcasting with Westminster

“These days it’s fashionable to talk about having a good work /life balance. To most people, this means working for a maximum of 40 hours per week – preferably from home for some of the time – and having five weeks’ annual holiday. It also means never being pestered outside of office hours – a workers’ rights policy that the Labour Party has recently championed and has even talked about putting into law. My life is not like that. This year, I will not be taking any holiday and it is normal for me to be on call from 5am until 11pm, seven days a week. It is for this reason that what has been published in the latest Register of MPs’ Financial Interests is deeply misleading.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • Johnson yet to appear on GB News 10 months after being signed up as a presenter – Observer
Other news
  • Lammy criticised for removing Israeli hostage badge to meet Palestinian PM – Sunday Telegraph
News in Brief



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Sharp decline in international students enrolling at UK universities

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The data shows that between January and the end of July, the total number of visa applications fell by 16 percent compared to the same period in the previous year.

Recent Home Office figures show that UK universities are witnessing a sharp drop in the number of international students applying for courses. As of July, there had been a 15 percent drop in sponsored student visa applications, marking a steep decline since the beginning of the year.  

The data shows that between January and the end of July, the total number of visa applications fell by 16 percent compared to the same period in the previous year. Some universities are preparing for an even sharper decrease, expecting a 50 percent drop in overseas enrollments this year, particularly for one-year post-graduate courses.

Separate research by the British Universities’ International Liaison Association found that nine out of ten of the institutions it had polled had received fewer overseas applications for courses starting in the autumn compared to 2023.

The drop in numbers has been attributed to several factors. Financial pressures on universities have worsened due to rising inflation, which has eroded revenue from UK students, making institutions increasingly reliant on the higher tuition fees paid by international students. Additionally, the previous Tory government’s efforts to restrict the number of visas issued have contributed to the downturn. Changes to visa rules implemented by Rishi Sunak’s government, namely stopping those applying for visas from bringing their families with them, have also reportedly contributed to the fall in students from overseas. The number of people applying for skilled workers, health and care, and student visas has fallen by more than a third compared to last year.

Despite heavy criticism that the policy split up families, Labour has said it does not intend to reverse the rule.

Speaking to Times Radion earlier this month, paymaster general Nick Thomas-Symonds noted the value of international students and workers. “We should be clear, we welcome people coming in on visas, hugely welcome, and they bring extraordinary diversity and richness to our university sector, for example. And we are hugely grateful for the work that workers from overseas do in our health service,” he said.

But he also stressed the importance of ensuring that Britain develops a domestic skills strategy alongside welcoming talent from overseas. In July, the government confirmed its decision to reject the youth mobility scheme that would allow young people to live, work, and study in the UK and Spain reciprocally, despite reports that Labour leader Keir Starmer was considering the policy. The rejection came as a blow to youngsters in Spain and the UK after hopes were raised by reports suggesting the Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez had approached Starmer about a possible deal at a meeting of European leaders on July 18.

The UK currently has youth mobility schemes with 13 non-EU countries, including New Zealand, Australia, and Japan, but there are no such agreements with EU countries.



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Trump holds rally in Pennsylvania as Harris, Walz to take bus tour ahead of DNC: Live

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Harris promises to pass first-ever federal ban on price gouging on food

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Former president Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are on the campaign trail this weekend, with both candidates holding events in Pennsylvania.

On Saturday, Trump held a rally in Wilkes-Barre where he launched familiar attacks against Harris, Democrats, prosecutors in New York and the media. The former president spent most of the time repeating his familiar remarks about inflation, the border, the stock market and more.

Meanwhile, the Harris-Walz campaign will embark on a bus tour around Pennsylvania on Sunday, just one day ahead of the Democratic National Convention.

Harris, joined by her husband, Doug Emoff, her running mate Governor Tim Walz and his wife Gwen Walz, will start in Pittsburgh and make multiple stops throughout the day in Allegheny and Beaver Counties.

They are expected to speak about the Biden-Harris administration’s record and strengthening unions in the battleground state before heading to Milwaukee for the convention

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In photos: Walz campaigns in Nebraska

Governor Tim Walz energizes a crowd of supporter in Nebraska on Saturday
Governor Tim Walz energizes a crowd of supporter in Nebraska on Saturday (AP)
Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz waves to the crowd outside after a campaign rally
Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz waves to the crowd outside after a campaign rally (AP)
Supporters react during a rally for Walz during a visit to his home state
Supporters react during a rally for Walz during a visit to his home state (REUTERS)

Ariana Baio18 August 2024 01:00

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Trump says Jewish people who vote Democrat ‘should have their head examined’

The former president went on a tangent about Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro and Jewish people during his rally on Saturday, claiming that any Jewish person who votes for a Democrat “should have their head examined”.

Trump claimed Vice President Kamala Harris did not choose Shapiro as her running mate “because he’s Jewish”. Shapiro was reportedly a contender for the Democratic ticket. He received criticism from pro-Palestinian activists who do not endorse the U.S. supporting Israel’s war in Gaza.

At the same time, Trump said, “I don’t think [Shapiro] is a good person.”

The former president said Jewish people who vote for Democrats “should have their head examined.”

Ariana Baio18 August 2024 00:00

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Harris vs Trump: How the presidential candidates compare on economic policy

Both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris want to claim the mantle as the greatest champion of the working class.

At the center of their pitches to those voters are economic policies. This week, the Vice President rolled out her plan to lower costs for American families.

Here’s a look at Trump and Harris’s economic plans.

Gustaf Kilander17 August 2024 23:00

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Trump spends rally attacking Harris

Donald Trump spent most of his rally on Saturday attacking Vice President Kamala Harris and repeated familiar unsubstantiated claims to supporters.

The former president claimed Harris would drive the US into “World War III” and cause the economy to crash like the Great Depression – two familiar remarks without any evidence to suggest that would come true.

Trump criticized Harris, calling her a “crazy person” and “lunatic” because of her laugh, saying President Joe Biden “hates” her, and complained that she has not been interviewed for several weeks.

At one point in the campaign, Trump asked rallygoers to turn to the TV screens where his campaign showed a negative video about Harris.

Graig Graziosi, Ariana Baio17 August 2024 22:30

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Trump says Joe Biden “hates” Kamala Harris

Donald Trump claimed President Joe Biden “hates” Vice President Kamala Harris during his campaign rally in Pennsylvania on Saturday.

“Joe Biden hates her,” Trump said of Harris. “Joe Biden hates her. This was an overthrow of a president. They went out, and I spent a hundred million dollars fighting Joe Biden. They told him he couldn’t win, they said his debate performance wasn’t the best ever, they said mine was the best ever.”

Trump’s rally speech was filled with familiar rhetoric that he has repeated through his press conferences, rallies and speeches.

There is no evidence Biden hates Harris.

Graig Graziosi, Ariana Baio17 August 2024 21:51

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Hundreds of people attend Walz’s rally in Nebraska

Hundreds of people gathered at the Astro Theater near Omaha, Nebraska on Saturday to voice support for vice presidential nominee Governor Tim Walz.

After an introduction by his wife and a former high school student, Walz took to the lectern where he promoted Vice President Kamala Harris’s policies and criticized Donald Trump’s.

Walz highlighted his experience as a high school teacher and football coach, his wife’s experience as a teacher, and his family legacy as educators.

“I truly believe each and every one of us can make a difference,” Walz said.

The crowd of energized rallygoers chanted “We won’t go back”, “Coach” and “Thank you, Tim”

Steven Dickerson, 16, wears a homemade t-shirt that reads ‘Vote Harris Walz 2024’ while waiting in line before U.S. Democratic vice presidential candidate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz speaks during a campaign visit to his home state in Omaha, Nebraska, U.S. August 17,
Steven Dickerson, 16, wears a homemade t-shirt that reads ‘Vote Harris Walz 2024’ while waiting in line before U.S. Democratic vice presidential candidate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz speaks during a campaign visit to his home state in Omaha, Nebraska, U.S. August 17, (REUTERS)

Ariana Baio17 August 2024 21:15

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DNC places anti-Trump billboards near PA rally site

The Democratic National Committee has strategically placed anti-Donald Trump billboards in the area surrounding Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania where the former president is holding a rally today.

“Donald Trump has always been a bad bet – and working families know better than to gamble on Trump and his extreme Project 2025 agenda,” DNC spokesperson Andy Toevs said in a statement.

“Ahead of his trip to the Keystone State, Pennsylvanians know the choice in this election is clear: in November, voters will choose between a prosecutor with a proven track record and a weirdo with 34 felony convictions and a dangerous, extreme platform that would rip away our basic freedoms.”

The billboards, which are placed in Scranton, Dunmore, Shavertown, Luzerne and Mountain Top, depict a photo of Trump with the words “Don’t Gamble on Trump.”

Words describing Trump, like “convicted felon”, “sore loser” and “he cheats” are posted around the former president’s face.

Ariana Baio17 August 2024 20:40

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Watch live: Governor Tim Walz speaks during campaign visit to Nebraska

– YouTube

Enjoy the videos and music that you love, upload original content and share it all with friends, family and the world on YouTube.

Ariana Baio17 August 2024 20:15

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Harris takes a populist tone on the economy. Will it help with young voters?

Vice President Kamala Harris struck a decidedly populist tone when she unveiled her economic policy in Raleigh, North Carolina on Friday.

The vice president made housing the core part of her policy rollout, pledging to build three million new homes. As part of that, she has proposed a tax incentive to build starter homes. This comes as nearly 1 in 10 homes are now worth more than $1 million, which is a record high.

The policy rollout comes just as Harris will head to Chicago for the Democratic National Convention. Much of the focus has been on whether she will face a revolt from younger voters because of her and President Joe Biden’s support for Israel amid its war with Hamas that has led to thousands of deaths in Gaza. Indeed, Harris has confronted protesters at some of her early rallies, to varying levels of success.

But polling has shown that young voters tend to prioritize the economy, particularly the cost of living and housing, while not nearly as many consider the war in Gaza to be of similar salience. Indeed, when The Independent interviewed Black voters in Milwaukee during the Republican National Convention before Biden stepped aside, they cited inflation and “high as hell” rent as primary reasons for dissatisfaction with Democrats.

Eric Garcia17 August 2024 20:00

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George Santos reportedly taking plea deal

George Santos, the former Republican congressman ousted amid a series of scandals, is reportedly set to plead guilty to charges in his federal criminal case to avoid a trial, lawyers involved in the case and those familiar with the matter said.

The disgraced lawmaker is expected to enter a guilty plea to the judge overseeing his case, District Judge Joanna Seybert, on Monday at the federal courthouse in Central Islip, New York, sources told Talking Points Memo, CNN, The New York Times and other outlets.

Santos is facing 23 felony charges including wire fraud, money laundering, theft of public funds, aggravated identity theft, making false statements to the Federal Election Commission and more.

Thus far, the congressmen pleaded not guilty to all charges calling the indictment, and superseding indictment, a “witch hunt” and has previously publicly denied talks of a plea deal. A federal trial was set to begin in September

On Friday, both sides asked Judge Seybert for a hearing on Monday but did not explain why.

The Independent has asked Santos’ lawyer for comment on the reports.

Ariana Baio17 August 2024 19:30



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Guido Vianello upsets Arslanbek Mahkmudov while Christian Mbilli dominates Sergiy Derevyanchenko


Italian Olympian Guido Vianello registered the most important win of his career by upsetting Arslanbek Mahkmudov via an eighth-round TKO victory on the same evening Christian Mbilli dominated Sergiy Derevyanchenko.

Vianello and Mahkmudov met in the World Series of Boxing nearly 10 years ago, with Vianello retiring in the fourth due to an ear injury. This time, things were different.

From the opening stanza, Vianello quickly landed an array of right hands. The straight right, however, was pivotal, as it caused Makhmudov’s left eye to swell by the third round.

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Mahkmudov’s left eye had swollen by the third round

Makhmudov tried to cut off the ring despite his impaired vision, but he was deducted a point in the sixth for punches behind the head. Vianello landed at will from the outside in the seventh. Makhmudov’s glove touched the canvas at one point, although it wasn’t ruled a knockdown.

At the start of the eighth, the doctor deemed Makhmudov no longer fit to continue.

“I am a contender now. I am ready for the world level, and I proved that tonight,” Vianello said.

“I thought I beat Efe Ajagba, and I came into this fight with a lot of confidence. I was in the best shape of my career, and that showed tonight. I dominated him and then knocked him out.

“I just had to stay composed. There was a knockdown that wasn’t called, but I knew if I stuck to my strategy, I would get the knockout.”

Vianello
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Vianello stayed composed to eventually secure victory via TKO

Meanwhile, Mbilli defeated three-time world title challenger Derevyanchenko via a dominant 10-round unanimous decision.

Mbilli, who is ranked in the top three by all major sanctioning organisations, was relentless from the opening stanza, throwing bombs from all angles.

Derevyanchenko tried to box from the outside but hurt his left bicep in the third round, forcing him to fight with just one hand. In the fifth, the 38-year-old Ukrainian fought back with consecutive rights, but Mbilli’s youth and power overwhelmed him as he struggled to end the fight on his feet.

Mbilli, Derevyanchenko
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In the night’s heavyweight co-feature, Frenchman Christian Mbilli dominated Sergiy Derevyanchenko

Mbilli maintained his unbeaten record with scores of 100-90, 99-91 and 98-92.

Mbilli said: “I had some problems with my left hand, and I was not able to bring it up. I had to throw punches. It was difficult, but I had to do my best.

“He’s a warrior. He was in a difficult position, but he fought back. I’m going to go back home and look at the fight again.

“Right now, I’m ready for big fights. I want to be a world champion. I know that to be the best, I have to beat the best. I don’t want to say any names, but everybody knows who’s number one. I want the fight with No 1.”

Derevyanchenko, Mbilli
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Ukraine’s Derevyanchenko fought hard in the contest, but was firmly second best

Derevyanchenko said: “My legs were good. I only had one arm. I needed to move. When I stayed, he punched in combinations.

“He’s a good boxer, a strong boxer. But if I had two hands, I think it would be another situation.”

Watch Anthony Joshua vs Daniel Dubois at Wembley Stadium live on Sky Sports Box Office on September 21.



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Harry and Meghan’s bombshell moment ‘proves they still want royalty’

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Meghan Markle wore a “big smile” as she and Prince Harry visited a music school during the latest stage of their tour of Colombia.

The Sussexes were greeted by the sound of booming drums as they arrived at the Escuela Tambores de Cabildo in Cartagena, the second largest city in the Caribbean coastal region, on the third day of their official tour of the country.

During the visit on Saturday, they participated in a drum lesson led by students alongside Colombia’s vice president Francia Marquez and her husband.

The couple applauded a performance by local drummers and listened to community members, including children, teenagers and parents, speak about the importance of preserving Cartagena’s culture – particularly its Afro-Colombian roots.

The school’s founder, Rafael Ramos, said in Spanish: “I love seeing Meghan’s big, big smile – I can tell she’s excited.”



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Channing Tatum Spills On Hollywood Star Who Played Matchmaker In Zoë Kravitz Romance

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Channing Tatum has a fellow actor to thank for setting him up with Zoë Kravitz.

The celebrity couple confirmed their relationship after riding through the streets of New York City together in 2021, and while they’ve since become engaged, Channing says none of it would’ve happened if it weren’t for Elvis Presley’s granddaughter.

“I remember Riley Keough texted me,” the Magic Mike star told E! News. “She was like, ‘Hey, I have a friend that wants to send you something. Do you know Zoë Kravitz? I’m going to give you her number.’”

“The very first time we met, it was after I read this thing that she sent me called Pussy Island,” he later explained, referring to the film Blink Twice’s original title.

“I was like, ‘I guess I’m definitely reading this.’”

Channing has since become a treasured member of his fiancée’s family and was recently praised by her rock star father, Lenny Kravitz, as a “very soulful human being”.

He was previously married to dancer and actor Jenna Dewan. The two announced their separation on social media in 2018 and are still finalising aspects of their divorce. Zoë was previously married to actor Karl Glusman.

While the pair were first linked in 2021, they had circled each other for years.

“We both were going out for a movie that I ended up doing called A Guide To Recognizing Your Saints,” Channing recalled. “Then she was in Jodie Foster’s [2007 movie The Brave One]. That’s the first time I ever saw her, and that was right around the same time.”

Channing added that his fiancée is “one of the cooler people” he’s ever watched on screen and admitted to “tracking” her career before they started dating.

The script she sent her future fiancé eventually became the film Blink Twice, a thriller she cowrote and directed that stars her now-husband-to-be.

The film follows a tech billionaire who invites a young cocktail waitress (played by Naomi Ackie) on a luxurious vacation to his private island when a sinister truth is revealed.

“She really doesn’t do anything but watch movies,” he told Esquire in a feature on Zoë published on Wednesday. “She’s like, ‘I don’t do activities. I don’t go hiking. I just love movies.’”





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Open Sunday – discuss what you like…

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The idea for Open Sunday is to let you discuss what you like.

Just two rules. Keep it civil and no man/woman playing.


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Labour pays the Dane-geld. Britain pays the price. | Conservative Home

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It is always a temptation for a rich and lazy nation,

   To puff and look important and to say: –

“Though we know we should defeat you,  we have not the time to meet you.

   We will therefore pay you cash to go away.”

And that is called paying the Dane-geld;

   But we’ve  proved it again and  again,

That if once you have paid him the Dane-geld

   You never get rid of the Dane.

A couple of weeks ago, I asked readers the tad-presumptuous question as to whether they missed the Tories yet. Since the first few post-election opinion polls have been uniformly grim reading, we must take the answer as a resounding no. But I do have a slight fear that I will find myself writing a variation on that theme once a week for the next five years.

I am prompted to do so today by Labour’s embarrassment over striking train drivers. Within two days of Louise Haigh announcing a new deal with Aslef to end industrial action dating back to 2022, the rail union announced another 22 days of action along the east coast mainline, stretching to November. Labour has paid the Dane-geld and failed to get rid of the Dane.

Aslef claims that this dispute is due to a breakdown in relations with the management of LNER, not pay. But ministers had argued that a 15 per cent pay rise for the train drivers over the next three years would prevent further disruption, save money, and reboot unions-government relations. Aslef donated £100,000 to Labour during the election. A wise investment?

The pay deal came with “no strings attached” regarding productivity. With the railways consuming £12 billion in government subsidy last year, value-for-money was an obvious sticking point for Conservative ministers. But Haigh and co have shrugged, accepted the unions’ eclectic list of Spanish practices, and paid out hand-over-fist to some of Britain’s best-paid workers.

Indeed, if accepted, this deal will mean that the average salary for drivers will have reached £67, 034 this year, an increase of £24, 544 since 2011. As well as prompting many to ask themselves why the hell they’re not train drivers, this morning’s Telegraph suggests this far more than nurses, teachers, Army privates, and police sergeants have managed. Thomas the Bank Engine, am I right?

Already, other unions are seeing the Government’s prodigality and wondering what they can pump out. The train drivers aren’t the first to be bought off, with Wes Streeting having agreed a 22 per cent pay rise for junior doctors. As well as GPs having embarked on action against a 7.4 per cent pay rise, the BMA is reportedly plotting to strike again once Labour is down in the polls.

The RMT, local government workers, technical college staff – all are queuing up to demand more and consider strike action, wholly conscious as to what has been dished out to their union confrères. Ministers must worry about buying off Angles, Saxons, and the Jutes. But wait! Didn’t Rachel Reeves mention something about a £22 billion hole in the public finances? This can’t help much.

As I covered, £9.4 billion of Reeves’s ‘black hole’ came from her decision to increase pay for various public sector workers by 5.5 per cent. The Chancellor claimed her hands were tied by the recommendations of independent pay review bodies. The same does not apply to the cash subsequently dolled out to doctors, train drivers, and whoever next benefits from her largesse.

How will all this be paid for? Bridget Philipson was unable to answer when pressed on the train drivers. Even without Labour re-nationalising the railways, the answer is obvious:  Joe Public. Higher fees or higher taxpayer subsidies – more cash will be shoveled in the drivers’ direction, even as they retain the right to restart their lunch break if spoken to by a manager.

What about the other increases? Bye-bye winter fuel payments, bye-bye the £86,000 cap on social care costs. If 14 years of Tory government were a prolonged exercise in buttering up retirees, Labour have already shifted their focus to their public sector friends. It might be a good decision for their party’s coffers. It is not so good of one for the national ones, as that ‘black hole’ grows.

Or does it? This week the Bank of England revised up their growth forecast for the year from 0.5 per cent to 1.5 per cent, on the back of the strongest growth in the G7 this year. As well as boosting the inevitable conservation as to whether Rishi Sunak should have waited until the autumn, this also produced a headache for Reeves, by making her first Budget ever-so-slightly easier.

The Chancellor argues that her dire inheritance from the Tories means tax hikes and spending cuts will be required on 30 October. If these pay increases hadn’t already made a mockery of any claim we were re-entering an age of austerity, Reeves might have more fiscal headroom than Jeremy Hunt had in March. Her justification for parsimony grows weaker as the cash is spent.

With a goal this open, should we bring forward the leadership election, so that the new leader can make their public debut attacking Reeves’s fiscal fallacies? It would make sense. But Hunt seems to be doing a good enough job at that already if our Cabinet league table is anything to go by. Voters will pay us little attention for quite a while. Let Labour own their hikes.

If any reader of this site had doubted, this union imbroglio proves a fundamental truth: even the worst Tory government is better than a Labour one. Many right-wingers disdained the Sunak administration, but at least it understood the basics of pay and the public finances. He raised taxes with gritted teeth. Reeves wants to and needs to, if the unions keep coming back for more.

The spectre looms of the next right-wing government having the traditional task of a Conservative ministry on coming to power: clearing up Labour’s mess. I say “next right-wing”, as it is unclear whether it will be us, Reform, or some Northumbrian start-up taking Labour’s place in 2029. Whoever it is will have one hell of a clean-up job to do. The future is bleak; the work is grim.

The giddy years of opposition must be spent planning out just how Humpty Dumpty will be put back together again. Policy Exchange have a report out today urging the Government to take on 2,000 new train drivers a year to end the use of overtime bans in negotiations. Thinking like that is a start, even if my instinct is to take one look at the DLR, and suggest we sack them all.

Future governments will have to make such choices if my worst fears about Labour’s worst instincts are born out. When they pay the Dane-geld, it is Britain that pays the price. And it is our side of the political divide who will have to switch from saying that we told you so, to suggesting what we would do differently, to getting back into government and doing it. Where there is discord…



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In addition to our normal open Sunday, we have a politics-free post to give you all a break.

So discuss what you like here, but no politics.


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Christian Mbilli gets unanimous decision victory against one-armed Sergiy Derevyanchenko | Boxing News


CHRISTIAN MBILLI (ranked top three by each of the governing bodies) collected a commanding unanimous decision win against Sergiy Derevyanchenko in a 10 round super middleweight bout, as the two headlined a nine fight card at Centre Videotron in Quebec, Canada.

Both fighters came out on their toes in the first round, quickly looking to engage with one another, though Mbilli rapidly established his stiff jab, which he would follow up with strong straight rights and pressing power hooks.

Mbilli was frequently sending shots with his head off the line to avoid Derevyanchenko’s outpouring of formidable headshots, and targeted the body rather heavily quite early on.

Derevyanchenko unloaded hooks upstairs to combat Mbilli’s onslaught of punches, with hopes to gain an early advantage against the undefeated Frenchman — which he was ultimately unable to do.

Throughout the fight’s entirety, Mbilli, 29, was clearly in control of the pace due to his output. For example, landing a strong right hand followed by hooks and bruising power shots in round two, heaving Derevyanchenko into the corner.

Fast forward to round four, Derevyanchenko seemingly tore his left bicep, which interestingly enough caused the fight to gain a bit more competitiveness — though only briefly — as the Ukrainian vet immediately went into survival mode by finally throwing combinations as the attacker.

Round five, a one-handed Derevyanchenko came out faster, setting up his shots with feint jabs, ducking, rolling and exhibiting his straight right hand in a slower paced manner than each of the previous rounds.

But, round seven was likely the best for Derevyanchenko, landing a pressing body shot and huge rights, notably stunning Mbilli. With a minute left in the seventh however, Mbilli gained back control and landed two assertive right hands to close the round, and he didn’t look back.

For the 38-year-old injured Derevyanchenko — who clearly was just trying to last until the final bell — the fight went quickly downhill, as Mbilli continued to land combinations that staggered the honorable Ukrainian.

The bout was scored 100-90, 99-91, 98-92, with Mbilli improving to 28-0 (23 KOs), and the three-time title challenger Derevyanchenko falling to 15-6 (10 KOs).



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