Strictly Come Dancing favourite Janette Manrara has posted a moving message on Instagram
Strictly Come Dancing’s Janette Manrara has shared a heartfelt goodbye following the conclusion of her tour.
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The former BBC ballroom professional, who currently presents the Strictly spin-off programme It Takes Two, has been performing alongside her husband Aljaz Skorjanec.
Describing it as the “end of an era”, Janette admitted she was feeling “so many emotions” while thanking supporters for their loyalty, reports the Mirror.
In her farewell post on Instagram, Janette wrote: “Last day of the tour and feeling so many emotions. I have loved every moment on stage with our cast and band, and sharing the love of dance and entertainment I have w/ everyone that came along to watch.
“Aljaz Skorjanec and I have been doing this together for a long while, but we don’t know when we’ll be on stage like this together again, so tonight will be a VERY special end of an era.”
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She concluded with a touching message: “THANK YOU for coming, for supporting us all these years, and for being the best audiences we could have ever dreamed of. It’s never ‘goodbye’, but instead ‘until the next time’. In the mean time, ‘there is always time for one… more… DANCE!’”
Strictly has undergone significant changes, with five professional dancers departing after main presenters Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly stood down.
Aljaz shared his own statement before the upcoming series after confirmation he had kept his position on the show.
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He posted a throwback image of himself and his wife from a professional dance photoshoot in 2013, captioning it: “@jmanrara and I look a couple months younger there. Little did I know then how being a part of @bbcstrictly would change my life for the better FOREVER. Back for my 12th season! Bring it on!!”
He concluded with a tongue-in-cheek remark: “My mission is to look exactly like I did in this photo by the time you see me on your screens in autumn.”
While Aljaz gears up to return to the series, Gorka Marquez has decided to step away from Strictly.
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Professional dancers Karen Hauer, Nadiya Bychkova, Luba Mushtuk and Michelle Tsiakkas are also leaving the programme.
More than 45 artists and creatives will exhibit work across two floors of the Grade II-listed former cotton spinning mill on this Friday and Saturday.
Visitors will be able to explore personal studios and gallery spaces featuring canvas art, prints, pottery, textiles and stained-glass pieces, with work available to view and buy.
The event will also include live music and refreshments on Friday evening, while Saturday will feature a homemade cake and coffee morning in aid of Crohn’s & Colitis UK.
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A spokesman said: “The FaMAS open studios event is almost here, and we invite you to join us.
“In addition to arts and crafts, Friday night brings live music and refreshments.
The event is free to attend, with organisers encouraging families and first-time visitors to come along this weekend.
Over 50 creatives rent studios at Falcon Mill Artist Studios, alongside three affiliated artists and five guest artists selected from submissions.
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The organisers said visitors would be welcome to “browse, buy or just to have a nosey” around the mill, which has been transformed into artist studios and gallery spaces.
The event takes place on Friday from 7 pm to 10 pm and Saturday from 10 am to 3 pm.
Organisers added: “We would love to see you. Feel free to enter studios to talk to the artists.”
This is an event that has happened before, and is expected to carry on strong again.
The award seeks to find York’s best hidden gems, celebrating the small businesses that line the city’s high street.
The shop, which first opened in the 16th century Sir Thomas Herbert’s House in the city centre in 2019, offers a unique blend of locally distilled gins, tastings and experiences.
It compliments a boutique distillery located in the Middleton’s Hotel in Skeldergate.
Recommended reading:
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Speaking about this, creator Emma Godivala said: “Everything we do and make is of the highest quality, we are open and honest, and we show the greatest respect to people and planet.
“Powered by green energy, plastic-free and sending zero waste to landfill, we are a Living Wage employer and support local charities and good causes.”
The shop opened in 2019 and has gone from strength to strength, adding a boutique distillery last year (Image: Matthew Kitchen Photography)
York Gin has been the subject of multiple awards, including gold medal certification at the world’s top spirit competitions.
It is set to launch three limited-edition gins to support three charities close to the company’s heart – St Nicholas Fields, York Cats Protection and St Leonard’s Hospice.
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Emma said: “These are hot off the press and details will be made public over the next few weeks.
“We will also be at North Yorkshire Cat Centre (York Cats Protection) 25th anniversary fundraiser this summer.”
Customers at the York Gin shop greeted by one of the team’s expert staff members (Image: Matthew Kitchen Photography)
The shop is dog friendly and offers a huge variety of gins, including best-seller Old Tom, London Dry and Outlaw Navy, which can come in miniatures, or as personalised bottles or as delicious marmalades.
For those wanting a more in-depth experience, York Gin Distillery offers additional tastings and gin-making sessions, guided by experts.
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Speaking about the recognition in the Press Best Independent Retailer competition, Emma said: “It means so much to be part of the York community.
“We are definitely not only open for tourists.
“Our refill station, which gives a significant discount for customers who bring in a bottle to be refilled, shows our commitment to providing York residents with a great reason to visit.”
You can select York Gin as your winner this year by filling out a voting slip, which is included in each edition of our paper until Thursday (May 14).
Researchers are tracing passengers who were potentially exposed to the virus in Georgia, California, Arizona, Virginia and Texas and in other countries around the world.
But experts still say there is little reason to believe hantavirus – and even this rare strain – will spread widely.
“The key to transmission is shedding virus in the presymptomatic and asymptomatic phase,” Vincent Racaniello, Higgins Professor of Microbiology and Immunology at Columbia University, told Newsweek Wednesday. “Influenza and SARS-CoV-2 are very good at it. For hantavirus, the barrier is efficient human-to-human transmission,” he said.
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Even on the vessel with nearly 200 passengers and crew, infections have only been seen in people with the closest contact, including as a married couple. Three people have died, including the couple, and three cases of hantavirus have been confirmed by laboratory testing since mid-March.
Many have wondered if a human-infecting strain of hantavirus that caused an outbreak on a Dutch cruise ship could lead to the next global pandemic. The outbreak has led to three deaths and five confirmed hantavirus cases (AP)
The ship is currently making its way to the Canary Islands, where it is expected to evacuate passengers, none of whom are showing symptoms of the virus, according to shipowner Oceanwide Expeditions.
Several passengers have already been medically evacuated and 30 guests disembarked the ship at St. Helena on April 24, including six of the ship’s 17 Americans.
Hantavirus is fatal in nearly four out of 10 people who are infected, with fever and dizziness typically seen within two months after contact with an infected rodent, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
But the risk to the American public remains “extremely low,” the agency assured Wednesday.
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That’s a sentiment echoed by the World Health Organization and its leaders, too.
“This is not the next Covid, but it is a serious infectious disease,” Maria Van Kerkhove, the organization’s director of epidemic and pandemic preparedness and prevention, told The Associated Press on Wednesday. “Most people will never be exposed to this.”
A virus such Covid is much more easily transmissible through the air and can spread before symptoms start.
Whereas this strain of hantavirus, known as Andes virus, is usually limited to people who have close contact with the ill person – though there has been little research conducted on its spread.
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It can also be spread for weeks after falling ill, but a previous outbreak in Argentina showed the window for transmitting Andes virus appears to just be about a day, Dr. Gustavo Palacios, a microbiologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, told CNN.
Passengers wait on the Covid-stricken Norwegian Pearl cruise ship at Port Miami in January 2022. Cruise ships helped Covid to spread during the pandemic (Getty)
First detected in the U.S. in the early 1990s, the virus has had plenty of time to explode.
“If it were going to become an epidemic, it would have happened a long time ago,” Thomas Ksiazek, a virologist with extensive experience tracking emerging infectious diseases, also told Newsweek.
While experts are insistent that the next pandemic is not Andes virus, researchers have long warned it’s on the horizon.
The prospect of disease outbreaks will likely triple in the coming decades, with the probability of a pandemic similar to Covid sitting at about 2 percent in any year, researchers at Duke University’s Global Health Institute said in 2021.
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“Is there another pandemic coming? Yes. When? Which pathogen? How severe will it be? No one can say for sure,” Yonatan Grad, a professor of immunology and infectious diseases at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said in a statement in 2024.
“But the big demographic changes that are coming, due to climate change as well as economic and other factors, will alter the landscape and create new risks, both for new pathogens to emerge and for known pathogens to re-emerge,” he added.
WHO reacts to fears of a COVID-style hantavirus pandemic
The Foreign Office has warned British travellers that hantavirus is now a health concern in Argentina and it has added the virus to its travel advice for people heading to the nation in South America.
It comes as the World Health Organisation (WHO) has said there are now five confirmed cases in the outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise, which set sail from Argentina on 1 April. Three people have died either on board the vessel or after travelling on it.
Tedros Ghebreyesus, director-general of WHO, said eight cases of the virus have been reported, with five confirmed and three suspected.
Although none of the passengers or crew currently on board are symptomatic, Dr Ghebreyesus warned more cases may be identified given the incubation period of the virus, which can be up to six weeks, but said the public health risk is low.
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Additionally, four British nationals remain in overseas territory St Helena after disembarking the cruise on the tiny island in the South Atlantic Ocean.
Seven British people got off the vessel there last month, before the hantavirus outbreak was announced, and two have returned to the UK to isolate, while the seventh individual has also been contacted and is not currently in the UK.
Authorities seek to trace passengers who disembarked before outbreak was detected
Countries worldwide sought to prevent further spread of the hantavirus on Thursday, after an outbreak on a cruise ship, by tracking those who had disembarked before the virus was detected and anyone in close contact with them since.
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Three people – a Dutch couple and a German national – died in the outbreak on the MV Hondius. In total, five people are confirmed to have contracted the virus, with another three suspected cases, the World Health Organisation said.
Hantavirus is usually spread by rodents but can in rare cases be transmitted person-to-person.
All passengers who disembarked in St. Helena in the South Atlantic Ocean, where the ship made a stop on April 24, have been contacted, the ship’s operator said. This included people from at least 12 countries, among them seven British citizens and six from the US.
The first confirmed case of hantavirus in this outbreak came in early May.
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Dan Haygarth8 May 2026 04:30
Authorities seek to trace passengers who disembarked before outbreak was detected
Countries worldwide sought to prevent further spread of the hantavirus on Thursday, after an outbreak on a cruise ship, by tracking those who had disembarked before the virus was detected and anyone in close contact with them since.
Three people – a Dutch couple and a German national – died in the outbreak on the MV Hondius. In total, five people are confirmed to have contracted the virus, with another three suspected cases, the World Health Organisation said.
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Hantavirus is usually spread by rodents but can in rare cases be transmitted person-to-person.
All passengers who disembarked in St. Helena in the South Atlantic Ocean, where the ship made a stop on April 24, have been contacted, the ship’s operator said. This included people from at least 12 countries, among them seven British citizens and six from the US.
The first confirmed case of hantavirus in this outbreak came in early May.
Dan Haygarth8 May 2026 03:50
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Watch: Spanish officials give hantavirus update as ship set to dock in days
Spanish officials give hantavirus update as ship set to dock in days
Dan Haygarth8 May 2026 03:30
‘Good news’ on Britons in hospital after cruise ship hantavirus outbreak – WHO
Two Britons who were medically evacuated from a hantavirus-hit cruise ship are improving, global health officials have said.
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A British passenger, understood to be a 69-year-old man, was taken to South Africa on April 27 and is receiving care at a private health facility in Sandton, Johannesburg.
Another Briton, Martin Anstee, 56, was taken off the MV Hondius on Wednesday and flown to the Netherlands to receive specialist medical care.
Dr Maria Van Kerkhove, from the World Health Organisation (WHO), said two patients – known to include a Briton – remain in hospital in the Netherlands, and another Briton is in intensive care in South Africa.
Dan Haygarth8 May 2026 02:30
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The illness starts with flu-like symptoms
An infection can rapidly progress and become life-threatening. Experts say it can start with symptoms including fever, chills, muscle aches and maybe a headache — much like the flu.
Symptoms of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome usually show between one and eight weeks after contact with an infected rodent. As the infection progresses, patients might experience tightness in the chest, as the lungs fill with fluid.
The other syndrome caused by hantavirus — known as hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome, which can cause bleeding, high fever, and kidney failure — usually develops within a week or two after exposure.
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Dan Haygarth8 May 2026 01:30
Hantavirus is giving me Covid flashbacks – so how worried should I be?
The sight of people in hazmat suits alongside phrases like ‘self-isolation’ dominating the airwaves is bringing back troubling memories for Katie Rosseinsky, who considers whether we should all start stocking up on toilet roll.
Dan Haygarth8 May 2026 00:30
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Recap: Four British cruise passengers still on St Helena after disembarking cruise
Four British nationals remain in British overseas territory St Helena after disembarking the MV Hondius cruise at the tiny island in the South Atlantic Ocean.
Seven British people got off the vessel there last month, before the hantavirus outbreak was announced, and two have returned to the UK to isolate.
Four remain, where their contact is being managed, and the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) have contacted the seventh person, who is not in the UK.
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A UKHSA spokesperson told The Independent: “We are aware of seven British Nationals who disembarked the ship at St Helena on 24 April.
“Two of these individuals are now self-isolating in the UK while the others have not yet returned.
“Four of these individuals remain in St Helena and we are in touch with the relevant health officials to provide advice on contact management.
“The seventh individual has also been contacted and is not currently in the UK.”
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On Wednesday, the UKHSA said the remaining British nationals on board can now be repatriated once the ship docks at its next destination if they do not develop symptoms. None of the British citizens onboard are currently reporting symptoms but they are being closely monitored.
Daniel Haygarth7 May 2026 23:30
‘Most people will never be exposed to this’
Global health officials say the risk to the general public remains low because the germ does not easily spread between people.
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“This is not the next COVID, but it is a serious infectious disease,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, director of epidemic and pandemic preparedness at the World Health Organization. “Most people will never be exposed to this.”
The virus usually spreads when people inhale contaminated residue of rodent droppings. Hantaviruses have been around for centuries and are thought to exist around the world.
Daniel Haygarth7 May 2026 22:30
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Watch: WHO reacts to fears of a COVID-style hantavirus pandemic
WHO reacts to fears of a COVID-style hantavirus pandemic
Dan Haygarth7 May 2026 21:30
‘This is not covid’
The WHO repeated that the risk to the general public was “low” even if the Andean strain of the virus, found in several victims, can in rare cases be transmitted among humans.
“This is not coronavirus, this is a very different virus,” Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO director of epidemic and pandemic management, told a press conference.
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“This is not the same situation we were in six years ago.”
The WHO said it was working on step-by-step guidance for when the dozens of passengers remaining on the ship, which is sailing to the Canary Islands, arrives there on Saturday or Sunday and the passengers disembark and travel home.
None of these passengers currently have any symptoms.
Record View says the new cohort of MSPs entering Holyrood must take concerns over teen violence seriously.
Kory McCrimmon was just 16 when he was stabbed to death in a dispute over £50 by a younger teenager in Glasgow’s east end.
The tragedy was followed by a series of horrific knife incidents involving young men in Scotland over the following year.
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Two teenagers, 15-year-old Amen Teklay and 16-year-old Kayden Moy, died in street stabbings that shocked the country.
Now Kory’s best friend has spoken out in the Daily Record in the hope that no more lives will be lost.
He has singled out our political leaders, claiming young people of his generation have been “failed and forgotten”.
That should be a wake-up call to the new cohort of MSPs entering Holyrood after yesterday’s election.
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To give credit where it is due, First Minister John Swinney has taken concerns over teen violence seriously.
He called an anti-violence summit after the Daily Record’s Our Kids… Our Future campaign highlighted growing concerns over knife crime and bullying –much of it filmed for online “likes”.
Swinney also met with bereaved parents of knife crime victims to hear first hand the devastating effects ofScotland’s blade culture. Whether he returns as FM is up to the voters.
But whoever has the keys to Bute House once the votes are counted today needs to make sure we don’t endure another summer of pointless knife-related deaths.
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That means investment in community facilities to give young people alternatives to hanging about the streets.
But politicians can only do so much. Every parent can do their bit to tackle teen violence by getting involved in their community to help our young people.
Whether it’s supporting the local youth football team, helping out at local clubs or even just watching out for your kids and their pals, we can all do our bit.
If Scotland’s kids feel they are “failed and forgotten” let’s show them they are loved and respected instead.
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Fantasy footie job
They say God loves a trier. So 10 out of 10 to John Walker for his bold attempt to land the best job in world.
The Tartan Army stalwart from Airdrie has applied for the role of Fifa’s World Cup Watcher. The tough gig involves sitting watching every single minute of the summer football festival in New York’s Times Square.
Best of luck to John – and we hope he lands the job of his dreams.
As for the rest of us, we may not become professional World Cup Watchers.
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But we will be more than happy to do it for free.
Get more Daily Record exclusives by signing up for free to Google’s preferred sources. Click HERE.
Victoria Park with my husband and my puppy Larry. We have lived here for more than 10 years now and we wouldn’t live anywhere else. The park is amazing and we love the local area.
Where was your first flat in London?
In Primrose Hill/Chalk Farm. It was “the Camden Years” so we spent more time at the Hawley Arms and Marathon Kebab House than we did inside the flat.
Offspring shoe shop in Camden. It was mental, I’ve never worked anywhere busier before or since and you barely got up the stairs before the manager was throwing Converse Chuck Taylors down to the stock room at you and shouting “these are a size seven”. I’d go home knackered, but the staff discount was a bonus.
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Designer Henry Holland
Sarah Brick/London Standard
Where would you recommend for a first date?
Andrew Edmunds, because it’s so old-school London and small and quaint and private. Nobody wants to be interrupted by someone they know in that situation. The food’s great and if it goes well then you’re in the right spot to find somewhere to go to continue the night.
What’s the best meal you’ve had?
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Dinner at Brat in Shoreditch. We had the anchovy bread, whole turbot and steak with the amazing potatoes. There have been so many amazing nights there with old and new friends and I just love the atmosphere —and the negronis!
What would you do if you were Mayor for the day?
Make Lime bikes free for all — I’m obsessed, I’m on them constantly. And while we’re at it, get rid of the parking bays. I want full door-to-door Lime luxury, thank you very much.
Where do you go to have fun?
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These days I’m lazy and like the local pub — we go to the Empress in Victoria Park at least twice a week. I have less stamina for leaving the postcode these days.
I want full door-to-door Lime luxury, says Holland
Ross Lydall
What’s the best thing a cabbie has ever said to you?
A cabbie once told me it was illegal to enforce the 20 mph speed limit. I told everyone that would listen and then I got myself and a load of my friends tickets in the process. Whoops!
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I just use a local gym and try to get in some runs around the park. Having a new dog has really disrupted my pre-work workout routine to be honest, so I’m getting a bit wobbly.
Have you ever had a run-in with a police officer?
Nothing dramatic as I’m fairly well behaved. The closest I’ve come is probably those aforementioned speeding tickets … which, in hindsight, I fully earned.
Where do you let your hair down?
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But it’s imperative that my hair is always “up”! I like a good boozy night propping up the bar at Bistrotheque and drinking as many martinis as possible.
Bistrotheque London
Daniel Lynch
Who do you call when you want to have fun?
My husband! We are partners in crime and we work together, so we have the same schedule.
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If we want to have a big night out we know we both need to have a clear day/week afterwards.
What’s your biggest extravagance?
Deliveroo. I hate cooking so I’m much more likely to order in if I can help it.
What’s your London secret?
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I love the walking tunnel from the Cutty Sark to the north side of the river. It always feels like a secret and I know you’re not supposed to cycle under there but it’s the best shortcut to get from one side of the river to the other.
What are you up to for work?
I’ve been working on a collaboration with jewellery brand Otiumberg which I’m really excited about — we have made two jewellery boxes together and I’m really happy with them.
Henry Holland at London Fashion Week
Getty
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Who’s your professional hero?
Paul Smith. We worked together on a collaborative collection a few years ago and also I work with his foundation as a mentor. I’m just in awe of his creative spirit and the way he’s so excited by what he does after all this time. He’s a true gent too and always has time for people — to help in any way he can.
What’s your favourite work of art?
I love the Chantal Joffe pieces in Whitechapel station. I only found out quite recently that she was behind the works on the platform which I had admired for ages.
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What’s your favourite grooming spot?
My friend Neil Wooley’s kitchen [of Percy & Reed]. He cuts my hair and going round to his to get a new do is as much of a social catch-up and spending time with one of my oldest pals as it is quiff maintenance.
“As you can see, we are scoring stunning percentages in traditional old Labour areas”
04:26, 08 May 2026Updated 04:38, 08 May 2026
Nigel Farage is celebrating a ‘historic change’ in politics after Reform UK gains a swathe of council seats across the country after the 2026 local elections.
Thousands of seats across 136 councils were being contested, including a third of councillors are to be elected in Bolton, Bury, Oldham, Manchester, Rochdale, Salford, Stockport, Tameside, Trafford and Wigan. Elsewhere, six mayoral elections have taken place in England, and elections for the Scottish and Welsh parliaments have also been held.
As of around 3:30am on Friday, May 8, full results were in from 13 of the 136 councils. Reform UK had gained 103 seats, with Labour losing 80. The Conservatives had lost 11 seats, independents 22 and Your Party one, with the Greens gaining eight and the Liberal Democrats three.
A jubilant Reform UK leader Nigel Farage told reporters at the party’s Millbank headquarters: “I think what you’re witnessing is an historic change in British politics. Forget left-right, there is no more left-right. It is gone, it is out of the window, it’s finished.
“As you can see, we are scoring stunning percentages in traditional old Labour areas. We’re currently averaging about 39% of the vote, of the seats that are in already, we’re currently on 145 seats won.
“We are way exceeding anything that I thought.”
When speaking about his predictions later Friday, he said: “What you’ll see tomorrow is the same pattern repeated across the south when we win Essex by an extraordinary margin and Norfolk by an extraordinary margin.”
As Reform surged in early local election results, the party said on X: “It’s clear that Labour voters are switching directly to Reform. We are penetrating the red wall in a way the pollsters and experts simply didn’t predict.
“Britain wants Reform.”
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And Nigel Farage suggested his party was on course for a general election victory after Reform UK’s local election success. He compared the substantial gains to clearing Becher’s Brook, a famously difficult jump in the Grand National.
He said: “This for me was our Becher’s Brook. If we cleared Becher’s Brook and landed well, we go on to win the Grand National. What is very clear to me is that our voters will stick with us now all the way through.
“They are not lending their vote to Reform.”
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In Greater Manchester, Reform won 13 seats of the 21 up for election on Salford City Council. Labour, which previously had 16 of the seats, held three. Three seats went to the Green Party, while one Conservative candidate and one independent were elected. The council remains under Labour control but the party now has 34 seats, rather than 47.
The Liberal Democrats secured Stockport Council, ending a no overall control deadlock which had remained in place since 2011. Responding to the Liberal Democrats taking Stockport council, which was previously under no overall control, a party spokesperson said: “This is a great result and shows that Liberal Democrat teams can win right across the country.
“Our hardworking local team has held off the rise of Reform – while others sought to sow division and chaos, we focused on the issues that matter.”
Labour lost 20 councillors in Wigan as Reform UK won all but one of the seats available. Although Labour retains control of the council, represented in Parliament by Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy, it does so with a much-reduced majority.
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Reform won 24 seats on the authority, bringing its total to 25, with an Independent candidate picking up the remaining seat on offer. And the Conservatives lost their one remaining seat in Wigan.
Reaching all three finals almost happened last season, when Chelsea won the Conference League and Tottenham beat Manchester United in the Europa League final.
But the last English team left in the Champions League was Arsenal, who were beaten by eventual winners Paris St-Germain in the final four.
The Premier League has had at least three teams across the finals of the Champions League and Europa League before.
In 2021, Kai Havertz scored the only goal as Chelsea defeated Manchester City in an all-Premier League Champions League final, while Manchester United lost in the Europa League final.
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And in 2019, Liverpool beat Tottenham Hotspur in the Champions League final in the same week Chelsea defeated Arsenal in the Europa League final in Baku.
Meanwhile, in 2006 English teams lost both finals – when Arsenal were beaten in the Champions League by Barcelona and Middlesbrough were thrashed 4-0 by Sevilla in the Uefa Cup.
But you have to go back more than 20 years from that point to find the previous season in which English clubs won two of the three available competitions.
In 1984, Liverpool claimed a fourth European Cup by defeating Roma, and Spurs defeated Anderlecht to win the the Uefa Cup for a second time.
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Liverpool also won the European Cup in 1981 with a 1-0 win over Real Madrid in Paris, while Bobby Robson’s Ipswich Town defeated AZ Alkmaar in the same year’s Uefa Cup final.
Jason Meade has become the second white law enforcement officer to be convicted of the killing of a Black man in Ohio since the 2020 killing of dad-to-five George Floyd
04:37, 08 May 2026Updated 04:44, 08 May 2026
A police officer has been found guilty of reckless homicide after shooting a young man who was merely taking sandwiches to his grandmother’s house.
Jason Meade gunned Casey Goodson Jr six times — five times in the back and once in the side — having pursued him into the property after passing each other in their vehicles. It led to outrage during the five years since, and Mr Goodson’s family says they can only now start “finally start truly grieving”.
Meade, now 47, has become the second white law enforcement officer to be convicted of the killing of a Black man in Ohio since the 2020 killing of dad-to-five George Floyd. Mr Goodson’s killing happened just six months later, in December of that year, and Meade was later tried for murder. This case ended in a mistrial and Meade stood in the dock again this year at a court in Columbus, Ohio.
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Meade, who is white, said his repeated shooting of Mr Goodson was justified because he saw the 23-year-old holding a gun and turning toward him in the doorway of the house in Columbus. No one else testified they saw Mr Goodson holding the gun he was licensed to carry, and no cameras recorded the shooting.
Mr Goodson was actually taking sandwiches to his nan. Meade had testified in the first trial that he pursued Mr Goodson after the man waved a gun at him as they passed each other in their vehicles. According to his family and prosecutors, Mr Goodson was holding a bag of Subway sandwiches in one hand and his keys in the other, and was listening to music through earbuds when he was killed.
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Tamala Payne, Mr Goodson’s mother, said the guilty verdict gives her family closure and peace. She told reporters outside the court: “I know now Casey can rest. You know, we’ve been fighting for five and a half years, and Casey sees his family fighting. He knows the stress. He knows the pain. He knows the heartache. And now, not only can we try to find peace and finally start truly grieving, my baby can rest.”
Meade, who retired from the Franklin County Sheriff’s Department in 2021, did not take the stand at his second trial. His prosecutors said the evidence suggested the gun wasn’t in Mr Goodson’s hands, but in a flimsy holder under his belt. They added it was found under his body, its safety mechanism still engaged, as Mr Goodson laid mortally wounded on the kitchen floor of his grandmother’s house.
The defendant, also a Baptist pastor, will be sentenced on July 16. Ohio law defines murder as the purposeful causing of a death, while the lesser charge of reckless murder means the defendant acted recklessly in causing a death. The former is punishable by up to life in prison, while the latter carries a maximum prison sentence of five years.
Ofsted, the schools inspectorate in England, was the subject of a UK parliamentary inquiry after the death by suicide of Ruth Perry, headteacher of Caversham Primary school in Berkshire, in 2023. The coroner’s report had concluded that Perry’s death was “suicide, contributed to by an Ofsted inspection”.
The parliamentary inquiry called for submissions of evidence about Ofsted from members of the public. Our recent research has analysed the 233 published submissions, many of which were from teachers. One submission to the inquiry included an impact statement by a headteacher written in 2022. It read:
The manner in which the inspection was conducted and the lack of integrity from the Lead Inspector has meant that my family have had to support me through suicidal thoughts and through countless occasions of being in floods of tears as soon as I think back to that day.
“It seems incredible that an issue like the conduct of school inspection should be a life-and-death matter, but so indeed it has become,” the submission from her school stated.
Theory of suicide
Sociological theory helps us ask questions and seek radical answers about how societies function, including government policy such as the inspection of schools.
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Sociologist Émile Durkheim’s theory of suicide argues that suicide does not only happen because of mental illness, but that it also has a social context. Durkheim examined how the interaction of people and social control, as well as notions of shame, guilt, failing expectations and feeling trapped, might result in someone having suicidal thoughts and feelings.
We found evidence of teachers feeling shame. One submission mentioned “the enormous shame and distress that is felt by those leading and working within the school”.
In my last inspection in November 2019, I lost half a stone in the three days (starting from the phone call) and lost my voice. My family suffered, there were arguments and I slept on the couch. The stress and pressure was all too much. As a school leader, I live in fear and I came into education because I love teaching but now I feel trapped.
The impact of Ofsted inspections on teacher wellbeing is well documented. Elnur/Shutterstock
The risk of a less than good inspection was “petrifying”. Having to be always ready for an inspection was “intolerable”. The thought of letting colleagues down by making a mistake was “unbearable”.
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Teachers wrote about ill health because of Ofsted experiences. These accounts included vomiting, physical collapse, panic attacks, incontinence and suspected stroke with a temporary loss of speech. One wrote that they had a miscarriage the day after a deeply stressful Ofsted inspection.
The government and Ofsted’s response
The Education Committee’s report noted that the committee had heard that “Ofsted has lost trust and credibility among many in the teaching profession.”
However, a number of reports on Ofsted’s practice, including the independent learning review commissioned by Ofsted, fail to acknowledge that teachers can have suicidal thoughts and feelings because of Ofsted.
Ofsted’s developments since the inquiry include introducing report cards for schools. Ofsted says this is fairer, but teachers say it creates more stress. An independent risk assessment warns that “the revised framework does not reduce the pressure on leaders to achieve a desirable outcome. The consequence of not meeting the expected standards of the revised framework will remain high stakes in nature.”
But we do not believe that these changes constitute the “root and branch” review of Ofsted previously called for by education leaders.
Professor Julia Waters, Ruth Perry’s sister, has said that our study “presents the evidence of the terrible human cost posed by Ofsted inspections, evidence that Ofsted and successive governments have still not fully grasped”.
Both Ofsted and the government should review how the inspectorate works. Not to do so runs the risk of school inspections remaining a life-and-death matter.
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If you’re struggling with suicidal thoughts, the following services can provide you with support:
In the UK and Ireland – call Samaritans UK at 116 123.
In the US – call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255) or IMAlive at 1-800-784-2433.
In Australia – call Lifeline Australia at 13 11 14.
In other countries – visit IASP or Suicide.org to find a helpline in your country.
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