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Strictly legends Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly ‘tipped for almighty return’

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Strictly legends Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly ‘tipped for almighty return’
Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly stepped down from hosting last year (Picture: BBC/Ray Burmiston)

Strictly Come Dancing’s double act Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly could be back on the BBC ballroom floor just a year after exiting as hosts.

It will surprise everyone, after the pair sensationally announced that last series would be their final one, in the middle of the autumn run. 

They bid a tearful farewell to the BBC viewership at the end of Strictly’s Christmas Day special, leading the room in one last call of the show’s catchphrase: “Keeeep dancing!”

Since then, a string of the top presenting names in the biz have been pitched as potential replacements, with no official announcement as of yet. 

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But new odds from the bookmakers over at William Hill suggest that there’s a possibility Winkleman and Daly could be back yet, albeit in a different capacity.

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It’s currently 16/1 for either Claudia Winkleman or Tess Daly to return to Strictly as contestants.

For use in UK, Ireland or Benelux countries only BBC handout photo of Claudia Winkleman (left) and Tess Daly during the live show on Saturday for BBC1's Strictly Come Dancing. Issue date: Saturday December 6, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Guy Levy/BBC/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: Not for use more than 21 days after issue. You may use this picture without charge only for the purpose of publicising or reporting on current BBC programming, personnel or other BBC output or activity within 21 days of issue. Any use after that time MUST be cleared through BBC Picture Publicity. Please credit the image to the BBC and any named photographer or independent programme maker, as described in the caption.
The pair said ‘Keeeep dancing’ for the last time during the Christmas special (Picture: Guy Levy/BBC/PA Wire)
For use in UK, Ireland or Benelux countries only BBC handout photo of Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly on the BBC1's Strictly Come Dancing Christmas Special 2025. Issue date: Thursday December 25, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Guy Levy/BBC/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: Not for use more than 21 days after issue. You may use this picture without charge only for the purpose of publicising or reporting on current BBC programming, personnel or other BBC output or activity within 21 days of issue. Any use after that time MUST be cleared through BBC Picture Publicity. Please credit the image to the BBC and any named photographer or independent programme maker, as described in the caption.
It’s currently 16/1 for either Claudia Winkleman or Tess Daly to return as contestants (Picture: Guy Levy/BBC/PA Wire)

So they would be partnered up with one of the show’s professional dancers and trained in all the moves they’ve been watching from the sidelines.

Lee Phelps said on behalf of William Hill: ‘Claudia and Tess have been loyal servants to Strictly Come Dancing over the last twenty years, so it wouldn’t surprise anyone if they made a comeback to the ballroom in some capacity.

‘The pair are 16/1 with us for either to compete in this year’s series, so we’re certainly not ruling anything else for the ex-hosts.

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‘As for who steps into the hosting role this year, Emma Willis, Bradley Walsh, and Rylan Clark are the latest frontrunners, but expect some further twists ahead of this autumn’s latest edition.’

Who are the favourites to host Strictly next?

These are the latest odds according to William Hill…

In the race to host, Emma Willis, Bradley Walsh, and Rylan Clark have developed a three-way race to be awarded the role at 5/4, with Zoe Ball (9/4) close behind.

Elsewhere, La Voix completes the list of leading contenders at 3/1, with Alex Jones and Alison Hammond each 5/1.

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Emma Willis and Rylan have already proven a popular duo on This Morning (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)
From ITV Studios THE CHASE Weekdays on ITV Pictured: Host Bradley Walsh ?? ITV Photographer: Matt Frost For further information please contact Peter Gray 0207 157 3046 peter.gray@itv.com This photograph is ?? ITV and can only be reproduced for editorial purposes directly in connection with the programme THE CHASE or ITV. Once made available by the ITV Picture Desk, this photograph can be reproduced once only up until the Transmission date and no reproduction fee will be charged. Any subsequent usage may incur a fee. This photograph must not be syndicated to any other company, publication or website, or permanently archived, without the express written permission of ITV Picture Desk. Full Terms and conditions are available on www.itv.com/presscentre/itvpictures/terms
Strictly is reportedly running auditions for new hosts this week (Picture: ITV)

We’re said to be down to the final nine in the quest to replace Daly and Winkleman, with chemistry tests in the diary for this week to determine who will follow in their footsteps.

The auditions will reportedly mimic a Strictly show, with judges and even a live band, to see who has what it takes to cope with the pressures of live television. 

A source told The Sun that the presenters in contention have signed non-disclosure agreements to keep all the details about the auditions top secret. 

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Given the prestige of the ballroom dancing show for the BBC, they’ve reportedly got the broadcaster’s top bosses overseeing proceedings, including incoming director general Matt Brittin.

Metro contacted Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman’s representatives for comment.

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I’m A Celebrity’s Sinitta slams ITV campmate for ‘being in her ear’ over exit

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Manchester Evening News

The singer became the second star to quit the ITV series after Jimmy Bullard

I’m A Celebrity South Africa star Sinitta has slammed one of her campmates for ‘being in her ear’ over her shock exit from the ITV reality show.

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It was a busy night in the jungle on Wednesday (April 22), with Pussycall Dolls singer Ashley Roberts the first star to be sent home. Ashley was the slowest in a challenge which some fans claimed used after footballer Jimmy Bullard quit the series earlier in the week.

Later in the show, the remaining celebrities were told that they’d be facing the next trial in pairs. Titled Dragged Through Hell, each celebrity pair were shackled together, back to back by the waist and ankles.

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A wall separated them from their partner but they were connected by a chain. In order to complete the trial they had to solve maths questions, solve codes and unlock the lockers to find a key that releases them from their shackles.

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Mo and football legend Harry Redknapp, former Emmerdale actor Adam Thomas and Gogglebox’s Scarlett Moffatt, and Sinitta and Coronation Street icon Craig Charles formed the teams.

Just one day after Jimmy was seen quitting the series, Sinitta was unable to finish the first part of the challenge. With Craig standing by wondering what to do, Sinitta stopped the trial by saying ‘I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out of Here’.

Assuring Adam Thomas and Scarlett Moffatt, who won the trial, to send her home, Sinitta said: “Craig would have found it if I had such an amazing time, I’m not even sad.”

However, Sinitta has now revealed that she ‘instantly regretted’ saying the words that stopped the challenge. According to the singer, Craig was the one who ‘gave up’.

She told ITV: “Yes, instantly. I quit because somebody else was telling me to do it. Even if we came last, I wouldn’t have quit. I’m not a quitter. I quit out of guilt and pressure, not because I’d run out of steam.

“It was taking me a long time, I admit. But what I had in my ear was, ‘Oh Sinitta, just throw it. I’m standing here like a lemon’. To me, he [Craig] gave up. I wish I’d fought for myself at the time.”

Sinitta added: “I got what I came here for, which was courage. This sense of being able to do whatever I believe. I feel rejuvenated. It was magical and so much fun. I laughed every day. I faced my fears.

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“I understand now, after being terrified of everything most of my life, the way to overcome your fears is to face them. I feel like this fearless, robust person now, rather than a fragile person. It’s been like therapy.

“The second time in the jungle is a memory I will cherish forever. The first time, let’s just pretend that didn’t happen!”

Noting that she feels ‘more robust and resilient now’ than when she first took part on I’m A Celebrity in 2011, Sinitta said that she is a ‘strong woman’.

She explained: “I’m an older girl, I know I don’t like to admit it. This is better than any anti-aging cream or pill, just face your fears, have some fun, don’t let age hold you back. Be inspired and do stuff, don’t put things off because you’re scared, push through it, there’s nothing but dry on the other side.”

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Two I’m A Celebrity stars evicted as fans left confused as FIVE face iconic Cyclone

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Daily Mirror

Two I’m A Celebrity South Africa contestants left the ITV show on Wednesday, leaving fans baffled ahead of the iconic Celebrity Cyclone trial

I’m A Celebrity South Africa is nearing its end and it’s time for one of the iconic moments in every series – the Cyclone. However, despite two famous faces being evicted on Wednesday’s episode, fans were left confused that the task will have five contestants.

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Ashley Roberts was the first to leave camp in a double eviction after being the slowest to complete a brain game. Sinitta then called the famous phrase, I’m a celebrity, get me out of here in a task as she struggled to get by snakes in Dragged Through Hell.

It left both her and Craig Charles facing the boot, with Scarlett Moffatt and Adam Thomas opting to send the 80s pop star home. Despite there being five remaining campmates, Ant and Dec then told the group to prepare for the Cyclone – something an ecstatic Scarlett labelled her experience in Australia doing as the second best day of her life after giving birth.

READ MORE: I’m A Celebrity’s Ant and Dec’s ‘dig’ at Adam Thomas after furious Jimmy rowREAD MORE: Adam Thomas’ brother Ryan had own reality TV scandal after being falsely accused on CBB

Traditionally the final four take on the task. However, exceptions do exist based on the series. But viewers online were quick to point out their confusion on Twitter /X.

One user wrote: “Cyclone is usually four people #ImACeleb #imacelebrity.” Another agreed, adding: “I thought only 4 do Celebrity Cyclone? #ImACeleb #ImACelebrity #ImAaCelebSouthAfrica.”

Craig, Scarlett, Sir Mo Farah, Adam Thomas and Harry Redknapp will take on the task and Dec branded it “bigger” and “badder” than ever before.

When it came to the show’s exits, Ashley admitted she was “gutted” not to make it to the end. And viewers seemed to agree. One wrote: “what do you mean ashley is gone [heartbroken emoji]. I wanted her in the final #ImACeleb”

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Another user said: “Ashley going out because of a tik tok challenge noooo justice for Ashley #imacelebrity #imaceleb.” And a third wrote: “Can we have Ashley back now Sinitta called it? Adam came back so…. Fairs fair, right?”

Ashley had told Geordie duo Ant and Dec in her exit chat: “In my head, I knew that was challenging and tough but y’all stepped it up a few notches. It was wild. But I was just like, ‘I can get through this, I wanna make it to the end’.

“But unfortunately Mo did his puzzle in 36 seconds and you could’ve gone to the fridge, made a snack, had a cup of tea, phoned a friend and I was still there.

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Sinitta admitted she feels she quit too soon. When asked if she regretted her decision, she said: “Yes, instantly. I quit because somebody else was telling me to do it. Even if we came last, I wouldn’t have quit. I’m not a quitter.

“I quit out of guilt and pressure, not because I’d run out of steam. It was taking me a long time, I admit. But what I had in my ear was, “Oh Sinitta, just throw it. I’m standing here like a lemon.” To me, he [Craig] gave up. I wish I’d fought for myself at the time.”

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China weathered Trump’s tariffs – but the Iran war is taking a toll

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China weathered Trump's tariffs - but the Iran war is taking a toll

China’s economy was already battling slower growth and unemployment when Donald Trump’s tariffs hit last year. Still, it proved resilient, boosting exports and reporting GDP growth of around 5%. But the discontent continued to simmer. And now the Middle East conflict is starting to take a fresh toll, putting pressure on factory orders, costs and jobs.

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Paul Scholes gets BBC apology during coverage of Ronnie O’Sullivan World Championship win

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Daily Mirror

Former Manchester United midfielder Paul Scholes watched Ronnie O’Sullivan in action against He Guoqiang at the Crucible on Wednesday afternoon

Paul Scholes received an apology from the BBC’s John Parrott because of how few frames he got to watch Ronnie O’Sullivan in action on Wednesday. Scholes was sitting on the front row for the second session of O’Sullivan’s World Snooker Championship first-round match against He Guoqiang.

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O’Sullivan led 7-2 from the first session and needed just three frames at the Crucible to secure a dominant victory and his spot in the last 16. During the ninth frame of the match, the BBC cameras cut to Scholes watching on, with Parrott saying: “A very interested spectator, one of England’s greatest midfielders, Paul Scholes, is here today to watch Ronnie. I’m sure he’ll be impressed with what he’s seen.”

Ken Doherty then added from the BBC studio at the end of the frame: “Fantastic. One great watching another. What a player he was! I know he loves the snooker. A lot of the footballers love to play snooker in their spare time. Great to have him here.”

But the match was completed soon after, as O’Sullivan wrapped it up with stylish century breaks of 113 and 120. Parrott added: “Paul Scholes might have enjoyed this, but he’s only going to see three frames of it. Sorry Paul, this man is just too good.”

O’Sullivan, 50, is making a record-extending 34th consecutive appearance at the Crucible and takes on fellow Class of 92 snooker icon John Higgins in the next round in Sheffield.

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READ MORE: Shaun Murphy erupts and demands answers after World Snooker Championship controversyREAD MORE: Iranian snooker star makes heartbreaking admission at Crucible – ‘How can I focus?’

“A couple of oldies,” the seven-time Crucible king said. “I was saying just hanging around this venue, I feel kind of old now because everyone is 22, 23. It’s like walking into a creche! But we are still hanging around and having a go. I am not the player I was and probably never will be, but as long as I can still enjoy the game…

“I am starting to enjoy it again. I’ve got a new method. I was a bit lost for three years, really lost. I am getting through the ball but still not good enough to win these events; I have to rely on a bit of luck, whereas years ago I felt if my game was OK, it’d take someone really good at their best to beat me.

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“Not so much now! I have to play really good and they can play alright and still beat me. John loves playing me. He really enjoys it. I think he plays better against me than I do against him. I think in a way I will be a bit of an underdog because I’ve hardly played for the last three years compared to John.

“He’s at every tournament and beating a lot of good players. Rusty Ron comes here and rolls a bit of a dice. Sometimes he throws some sixes, but most of the time they’re ones the last three years! Let’s hope I can throw a couple of fives or sixes against John. But he’s probably the favourite, but it’s a different type of pressure.

“The pressure’s off me and more on John in this match. It should be a good game. Hopefully I can give him a decent game!”

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O’Sullivan admitted having cue tip issues this week. He continued: “I think the tip is more important than the cue to be honest with you. That’s why I brought two cues.

“I have been saving this all year because it had a bit of life in it and I thought if I come here and my main cue is no good, then I’d rather have a cue I like with a good tip on because I can get used to anything pretty quickly if I like it.

“The tip wasn’t good yesterday. I did a good job considering. A bit of a roll of the dice, a bit of a gamble, I was a bit nervous because I thought I could look a bit silly, but you have to back yourself. I back myself.

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“I make some crazy decisions in everyone else’s eyes, but they make complete sense to me and it’s seemed to work for me over the years, so I tend to listen to my own advice. It might go wrong sometimes, but overall it’s worked pretty well for me.”

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Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.

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Arsenal FC and Man City run-ins compared as Premier League title race goes to wire

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Arsenal FC and Man City run-ins compared as Premier League title race goes to wire

Manchester City moved top of the Premier League with a 1-0 win at Burnley on Wednesday, leapfrogging Arsenal in the process.

Mikel Arteta’s side had held a nine-point gap at the summit just a fortnight ago, but stutters from the Gunners and relentless form from City has seen that advantage washed away.

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Firefighters tackle bathroom blaze inside Belfast hospital’s emergency department

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Belfast Live

One man was reportedly involved in the incident

Authorities responded to a fire at Royal Victoria Hospital earlier this evening after a blaze broke out inside a bathroom.

Emergency services arrived on the scene shortly before 6.45pm to tackle the fire in the accident and emergency (A&E) unit of the hospital.

A spokesperson for the NI Fire and Rescue Service said four pumping appliances and around 20 personnel were deployed to the scene. One man was allegedly involved in the inciden and treated for injuries.

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The main waiting area and reception were closed and patients attending the ED were directed via a side entrance with some ambulances diverted to other city hospitals for a short time.

A NIFRS statement said: “One male was injured and we had four pumping appliances there, the area was smoke logged.”

It was reported that crews left the scene at around 9.10pm.

For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our daily newsletter here.

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Democrats celebrate Virginia redistricting win, but more battles await

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Democrats celebrate Virginia redistricting win, but more battles await

Democrats on Wednesday celebrated an election win in Virginia that could put them slightly ahead in the national redistricting competition that President Donald Trump triggered in an attempt to preserve his party’s House majority in this year’s midterms, but it will not be the final round.

Now that it’s been approved by voters, the new Virginia map will have to clear additional legal hurdles. On Wednesday, the state attorney general’s office said it would immediately appeal a ruling earlier in the day from a judge in rural southern Virginia who ordered that the results of Tuesday’s vote not be certified.

Ultimately, the Virginia Supreme Court will decide whether Democratic lawmakers violated procedural rules when they referred a constitutional amendment to the ballot authorizing the new U.S. House districts that could help Democrats win as many as four additional seats in the state. If so, that could invalidate the map voters narrowly approved Tuesday.

What happens next in Florida also will matter.

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The state’s Republican-controlled Legislature is to meet in a special session next week that GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis called in part to draw a new map to expand the party’s congressional majority there. The U.S. Supreme Court is scheduled to issue an opinion by the end of June in a Louisiana case that could overturn a key provision of the Voting Rights Act and lead to redrawn political maps across the South, though almost all of those could not happen until 2028.

After voters passed the Virginia amendment, Democrats could tentatively claim that they netted 10 seats nationally from the mid-decade redistricting, compared with the nine that Republicans claim. Even if things swing again in the GOP’s favor, the net result of Trump’s campaign would be at best an incremental increase in the number of GOP-leaning House seats at a time when his approval rating is dropping and Republican anxiety over losing control of Congress in November is rising.

“We have successfully blunted Trump’s attempt to completely hijack the midterms,” said John Bisognano, president of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee.

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Many Republicans agreed.

“The GOP will now lose net seats across the country. If you’re going to pick a fight, at least win it,” Ari Fleischer, who was a spokesman for President George W. Bush, posted on the social media site X after the Virginia vote. “All this was foreseeable and avoidable. We should not have started this fight.”

Adam Kincaid, executive director of the National Republican Redistricting Trust, argued that it is too soon to declare one party a victor.

“It’s an ongoing process with many legal challenges pending, and it’s far too early for sweeping statements on the final outcome,” he said.

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Trump on Wednesday tried to undermine the Virginia result by leveling groundless accusations of fraud similar to ones he made after losing the 2020 presidential election. He called the Virginia vote “RIGGED” and “Crooked” in a post on his social media site and added, “Let’s see if the Courts will fix this travesty of ‘Justice.’”

Redistricting spread from Texas to other states

Redistricting is typically done every 10 years after each census, unless ordered by a court. But last summer, Trump pushed a redrawing in Texas, prodding the state’s Republican-controlled Legislature to add up to five winnable House seats for his party. Trump then began pressuring other Republican-run states to follow. Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio have since created more GOP-leaning seats in addition to Texas.

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Democrats began to fight back, even though they were more constrained because several Democratic-controlled states had maps drawn by independent commissions rather than lawmakers and governors.

To counter Texas, California’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, pushed the Democratic-controlled Legislature to place a redistricting initiative on last fall’s ballot. After voters overwhelmingly approved it, the measure will replace a commission-approved map with one that could gain Democrats five seats.

Democrats reclaimed the Legislature and governor’s office in November in Virginia and swiftly moved to replicate California’s move with an even more aggressive redistricting plan. It replaces a congressional map imposed by a court after the last census that had resulted in a 6-5 edge for Democrats with one that could allow Democrats to win as many as 10 seats.

“We are not going to let anyone tilt the system without a response,” state Senate President L. Louise Lucas said at a news conference Wednesday.

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Courts could still have a say on redistricting

In Washington, U.S. House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York warned Florida Republicans, who have been openly nervous about redrawing their district boundaries and potentially spreading their core voters too thin before an election that appears to be trending against them.

“Our message to Florida Republicans right now is, ‘F around and find out,’” Jeffries said.

House Majority Forward, the nonprofit arm of the super political action committee aligned with House Democrats, has spent nearly $60 million to push back against Republicans’ redistricting efforts. Some $40 million of that was on the Virginia campaign.

Another obstacle in Florida is an anti-gerrymandering constitutional amendment that was approved by state voters in 2010. It is likely that any new Florida map would trigger significant litigation, although six of the state Supreme Court’s seven justices were appointed by Republicans.

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Nicholas Stephanopolous, a Harvard law professor, said a challenge for DeSantis is that the Florida amendment forbids drawing lines for purely partisan purposes, so he has to find some other excuse for revising the map. “Even with that sort of acquiescent state supreme court, I don’t think it’s a done deal,” Stephanopolous said.

The Virginia move comes with its own legal issues. Republicans have challenged the process that Democrats used to place the measure on the ballot and the state Supreme Court opted to wait for the vote before even scheduling arguments in the case. It is unclear when a ruling could come.

Wednesday’s ruling stopping certification came from a separate case that Republicans filed with the same lower court judge, whose initial ruling against the initiative was put on hold by the state supreme court.

“The ballot box was never the final word here,” Terry Kilgore, the Virginia House Republican leader, said in a statement after Tuesday’s vote. “Serious legal questions remain about both the wording of this referendum and the process used to put it before voters.”

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The biggest legal wild card is held by the U.S. Supreme Court. Its conservative majority could throw out a requirement under the Voting Rights Act that in areas with a large minority population, mapmakers draw districts that are more favorable to the election of minority candidates.

That provision has led to the creation of several majority-minority congressional seats, especially in the South. Without it, Republicans in conservative states could shrink the number of U.S. House seats winnable by Democrats even further.

But it’s unlikely that any state other than Louisiana, which brought the lawsuit the high court will rule on, would be able to adjust its congressional lines in time for November even if the court eliminates that provision, known as Section Two. That’s because the November election is already officially underway in most states and candidate filing deadlines — and, in some cases, primary elections — have already passed.

___

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AP Congressional Correspondent Lisa Mascaro and Associated Press writer Leah Askarinam in Washington contributed to this report.

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‘Our daughter, 12, died playing in the park after council failed to do job properly’

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Daily Record

Brooke Wiggins, 12, died while playing on a rope swing in Banstead, Surrey, which an inquest has heard should have been removed by Surrey County Council

The devastated father of a 12-year-old girl who died while playing on a rope swing – which an inquest heard should have been removed by the council – has said his daughter would still be alive if “people had done their job properly”.

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Brooke Wiggins died on November 9, 2024, in Banstead, Surrey, just days before her 13th birthday. She suffered fatal injuries when a tree branch snapped and struck her as she played on a rope swing with friends, South London Coroner’s Court heard.

The inquest was told the tree, maintained by Surrey County Council, had been inspected in May 2022 and that a re-inspection had been due in May 2024, but did not take place as scheduled.

Acting on behalf of Mr Wiggins, Christian Weaver argued that, had the checks been carried out, the swing would have been removed by the council, “as per policy”. Gordon Carson of the Health and Safety Executive told the hearing the council’s policy is to remove rope swings from trees within seven days.

In a statement read by Assistant Coroner Ivor Collett, Brooke’s dad Lee Wiggins said: “Only 12 years old, and now she’s gone forever. When I think of her, I ask myself, ‘why my darling Brooke?’”

“If only people had done their job properly… the one thing they are paid to do, and did it properly, Brooke would still be here,” he said.

Mr Wiggins described Brooke as an “amazing young woman” who was “bright” and “very funny”, adding: “I am devastated that my baby girl has been taken from me. She packed so much into her short life.”

Representatives for Surrey County Council said expert evidence showed an inspection of the tree may not have achieved a “materially different outcome”.

In a statement read by Mr Collett, Brooke’s mum Claire Etherington described her as a “beautiful, fun, caring and loving girl” who had “the most incredible way of lighting up every room”.

“She was a smart girl with so much potential”, who loved dancing, art, singing, taking photographs and expressing herself, she said. “We will always wonder what she would have gone on to achieve in her life.” The inquest continues.

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West London shop to stay open despite illegal worker paid below minimum wage

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West London shop to stay open despite illegal worker paid below minimum wage

Additionally, the shop must maintain a written log of annual staff training on these compliance checks Finally, all alcohol must be sourced exclusively from legitimate, registered UK suppliers, with detailed invoices and delivery notes kept on-site for immediate inspection upon request.

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Why Chelsea FC sacked Liam Rosenior and where BlueCo plan to turn next

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Why Chelsea FC sacked Liam Rosenior and where BlueCo plan to turn next

Defenders of the BlueCo regime will say the hierarchy gave Rosenior the benefit of the doubt and could have sacked him sooner. Internationals left for the March break on the back of four consecutive defeats to PSG (twice), Newcastle and Everton. Even now, a month on, though, this is a very early termination, indeed, and a humiliation for all parties.

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