A much cooler spell is expected next week after the UK experienced its hottest May on record
Eliana Nunes News Reporter and Kirstie McCrum
21:07, 27 May 2026
Scotland is forecast to face a major temperature drop next month after this UK experienced a heatwave in the last few days. Weather charts indicate 11 UK counties could experience temperatures of 5C or lower, with the Met Office cautioning of a “changeable period” on the horizon.
A significantly cooler spell is anticipated next week following temperatures that provisionally reached 35C at Heathrow and Kew Gardens in London on Tuesday, according to the Met Office. This came after a blistering weekend during which the UK shattered its previous record for the warmest May temperature.
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On Monday, Kew Gardens hit 34.8C, surpassing the earlier record of 32.8C established in 1922 and 1944. Nevertheless, minimum temperature charts from WXCharts, which utilises MetDesk data, indicate that during the early hours of next Tuesday (2 June), temperatures could linger between 4C and 7C throughout Scotland and northern England.
Across Scotland, the Highlands, Moray and Aberdeenshire in the north, alongside Jamestown in Dumfries and Galloway in the south, could witness temperatures dropping to a brisk 4C, reports the Mirror.
Meanwhile, Northern Ireland, the Midlands, southern England and Wales are forecast to experience minimum temperatures in the high single figures
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Counties set to see 5C or below on Tuesday
Scotland
Aberdeenshire
Angus
Highland
Moray
Perth and Kinross
Scottish Borders
South Lanarkshire
Dumfries and Galloway
England
North Yorkshire
Cumbria
Northumberland
In its forecast for Monday, June 1, to Wednesday, June 10, the Met Office states: “A changeable period, as a sequence of Atlantic weather systems move in from the west to bring a mixture of drier spells and some showers or longer spells of rain at times.
“The best of the drier conditions are more likely towards the south and east, with the rain generally more frequent in parts of the west and northwest, although there will be drier interludes here also.
“Temperatures will be near-normal overall, with the warmest spots most likely across eastern areas. It will also be breezy at times, most especially across northwestern areas.”
The Met Office’s forecast for June 11 to 25 suggests weather patterns will probably be “changeable or unsettled” initially, before high pressure takes greater control from the middle of the month, delivering drier and calmer spells.
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“Temperatures are expected to be near normal at first, but probably rising above average later,” the national forecaster states.
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Greater Manchester Police said officers arrested a man in his 40s on suspicion of causing a public nuisance and a public order offence following an incident at Terminal 2 on Wednesday, May 27.
The incident led to the closure of the Terminal 2 drop-off area for several hours, with passengers facing delays and being redirected to JetParks 1.
In a statement issued this afternoon, GMP said: “Following an incident at Manchester Airport Terminal 2 today (Wednesday 27 May 2026) that has now been resolved, we have arrested a man in his 40s on suspicion of causing a public nuisance and a public order offence.
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“He has been taken into custody to be questioned by officers.”
Police were first called to the airport at around 8am.
Earlier in the day, it was understood officers were dealing with a welfare-related incident. Although this was not the case.
Manchester Airport warned passengers to allow extra time when travelling through the airport while the Terminal 2 drop-off remained closed.
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Other terminals were unaffected and there is not believed to have been any wider threat linked to the incident.
Emergency services are continuing to search a river in Swanscombe, Kent, where a young man is believed to have vanished.
The search operation is understood to involve Kent Police, volunteers from Kent Search and Rescue, team from South East Coast Ambulance Service and specialist water rescue teams.
Thermal drone operators are also reportedly being used.
Greater Manchester Police, Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS) and North West Ambulance Service have reportedly been in attendance since around 11pm last night, with specialist negotiators understood to be involved.
The incident is centred around the multi-storey car park at the junction of Rochdale Road and Derby Way.
A spokesperson for GMFRS said: “At around 10.55pm last night ( 26 May), fire crews were called to the rescue of a person at The Rock in Bury.
“Two fire engines from Bury and Whitefield stations alongside the aerial ladder platform from Bolton Central, the hydraulic platform from Manchester Central and the Technical Response Unit from Leigh quickly attended the scene.
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“Working alongside Greater Manchester Police and North West Ambulance Service, firefighters implemented appropriate safety measures and remained on standby while the incident was managed by partner agencies. Crews remain in attendance.”
The incident comes just days after emergency services were called to a separate welfare concern at the same car park earlier this month on May 23 and May 19.
Emergency services at the scene earlier this month (Image: Dan Dougherty)
As of around 9:45pm on Wednesday evening, emergency services were still at the scene with a small cordon in place around part of the car park area.
Witnesses reported seeing multiple police vehicles, fire engines and ambulances parked along Rochdale Road throughout the day.
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One eyewitness said: “Fire appliances are still here and the rest of the emergency services. They have cordoned off the rear of the car park.”
Incident commanders were involved (Image: Phil Taylor)
Another witness confirmed an individual remained on the top floor of the car park during the incident.
A GMP spokesperson earlier confirmed officers were “dealing with a welfare incident there today”, although police have not yet confirmed whether the situation has been resolved.
Despite the large emergency service presence, no roads were closed and traffic in the area remained only moderately affected throughout the day.
Taking place at Bents Park on Sunday, August 2, the concert will be headlined by DJ Judge Jules, who will deliver a high-energy set of dance classics supported by a live band and singers.
The line-up also includes electronic music duo Phats and Small, known for their infectious dance anthems, and UK garage act Sweet Female Attitude.
Councillor Stan Wildhirt, Mayor of South Tyneside, said: “The addition of two fantastic acts means this is shaping up to be a truly standout finale to the Sunday Concerts.
“Phats and Small are a huge crowd favourite and bring a brilliant party atmosphere, while we’re delighted to welcome Sweet Female Attitude to the festival for the first time.
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(Image: South Tyneside Council)
“With Judge Jules headlining, it promises to be an amazing afternoon, packed with feel-good favourites that audiences of all ages can enjoy.”
Ultrabeat and yet-to-be-announced local performers will also take to the stage, rounding off the festival’s signature concert series.
The Sunday Concert series begins on July 19 with a hometown performance by Joe McElderry, supported by singer Sonia and local artists Shelley Stevens and Channy.
The following week, on July 26, 1980s icons ABC will perform some of their biggest hits, including The Look of Love, Poison Arrow, and When Smokey Sings.
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Chesney Hawkes, best known for his 90s hit The One and Only, will also perform, alongside Nuromantica, who will bring a selection of synth-pop favourites from the era.
Chesney Hawkes (Image: South Tyneside Council)
This year’s concerts are fully ticketed, with pricing aimed at keeping the events accessible to all.
General admission tickets purchased in person cost £5 for those aged 17 to 65, while tickets are £2 for those aged 11 to 16 or 66 and over.
Entry is free for children aged ten and under.
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Tickets can be purchased from visitsouthtyneside.co.uk and will be emailed for scanning on entry.
“For generations this iconic family business has been part of the fabric of our town”
A Ballymena institution is preparing to serve up its final scoops this weekend.
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McGroggan’s on William Street is one of the Co Antrim town’s most popular family-run businesses – with their vanilla ice-cream with special raspberry sauce having been a family favourite in many a local home.
Last weekend, the 103-year-old ice cream shop announced that it would be shutting its doors on Saturday, May 30 and thanked the town for its custom for over a century.
Founded by Hugh and Annie McGroggan in 1922, their traditional homemade ice cream has won countless awards in its long history in Ballymena town centre.
Taking to social media, the McGroggan family said: “After a remarkable 103-year journey, it is with a heavy heart that we announce McGroggan’s will be closing its doors on May 30th, 2026.
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“Our family is immensely grateful for the incredible community that has supported us.
“Thank you to all of our wonderful customers for your loyalty, memories, and support throughout the years”.
After news broke of the closure, many locals have made they journey to William Street to have a final cone that McGroggans ran out of ice cream.
Announcing a preorder system, they said: “Folks it has been so busy since we announced our closure we are running out of Ice cream,
“We’re making more as fast as we can, but we can’t quite keep up with your amazing demand. Thanks for keeping us so busy!”
North Antrim MLA Jon Burrows said he was “saddened” to hear the news of McGroggan’s closure.
He said: “For generations this iconic family business has been part of the fabric of our town creating memories for local families, visitors and children enjoying what many would call ‘the best ice cream in the country.’ “Its closure is not just the loss of a shop. “Small businesses are the backbone of our economy and our communities, yet too many are under relentless pressure from rising costs, online competition, rates burdens and declining footfall.”
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“Our high streets matter. They are about more than commerce -they are about community, identity and pride of place,” he continued. “Thank you to everyone at McGroggan’s for the memories, the service and the contribution you made to Ballymena over so many years.”
Two days before registered Republicans voted in the party’s primary election in Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District on May 20, Donald Trump called the incumbent representative, Thomas Massie, “the worst Republican congressman in history”.
Massie subsequently lost the primary to a political newcomer with no prior office-holding experience. Ed Gallrein’s not-so-secret weapon was that he had the backing of the US president.
Just over a week later, Texas voters were asked to decide whether 22-year Senate veteran John Cornyn should be ousted in favour of the state’s attorney-general, Ken Paxton – who was also endorsed by Trump. Despite all the baggage Paxton carried into the race: an indictment for fraud (charges were later dropped) and an impeachment for bribery, which he denied before being acquitted in the state senate. He has also gone through an acrimonious divorce accompanied by accusations of adultery (which he has also denied), Paxton won the May 26 primary handsomely with more than 60% of the vote.
Trump has long threatened to “primary” – back a rival candidate in the upcoming primary election – Republicans who displease him in some way. But with the midterm elections looming in November, we’re seeing this put into practice. And it’s making the conservative “old Republican” wing of his party very nervous.
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America’s high-profile November elections involve straightforward contests between the nominees of the main parties. But before a candidate can represent their party, they must first win an internal election. These primaries are open to registered party voters (and, in some states, independents)
American political parties have no centralised power to simply appoint or protect their candidates. The process is genuinely competitive and, as the current cycle is demonstrating, potentially dangerous for incumbents.
For the president to mount a primary challenge is to use a particularly powerful weapon in American political life – it can end a career without the opposing party winning a single vote. On one level, the 2026 GOP primaries are rolling out in the usual manner. However, who is orchestrating them, and why, is worthy of note.
According to the Brookings Institute, Thomas Massie drew Trump’s ire not for any ideological deviation from the GOP line, but for opposing a short-term funding bill and for joining a Democrat in calling for the Department of Justice to release the Epstein files.
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The Texas case has a similar logic. Prior to his decades in the Senate, John Cornyn served as Texas attorney general and sat on the Texas Supreme Court. He is a stalwart conservative by any conventional measure. However, he was associated with a bipartisan gun safety bill in 2022, and he has at times been willing to work across the aisle. His challenger, Ken Paxton, is a Maga true believer who survived a bipartisan impeachment attempt in the Texas senate, largely on the strength of Trump’s support.
The pattern extends well beyond these two cases. In one state alone, Trump endorsed challengers to eight GOP state senators who had voted against a redistricting bill, with his allies spending millions in an effort to remove them. The message is clear: vote against the president’s wishes, and he will come for your seat.
Electoral gamble
This strategy is inevitably unnerving for the more traditional wing of the Republican Party. Democrats are confident, and Republicans concerned, that a Paxton nomination in Texas will make it harder for Republicans to hold the seat in November. The Democratic nominee, state representative James Talarico, raised a staggering US$27 million (£21 million) in the first three months of the year alone.
Old allies: Donald Trump with Texas attorney-general Ken Paxton in 2019. AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File
There is some Trumpian precedent for all of this. In 2017, the 45th president endorsed Luther Strange in an Alabama senate primary. Strange lost to Roy Moore, who then lost the general election to Democrat candidate Doug Jones. The lesson that a rock-solid Republican seat can be lost was clear, although apparently unlearned.
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Republicans are defending slim majorities in both the House and Senate in 2026. They can afford few losses. Replacing electable incumbents with ideologically pure but extreme and therefore electorally risky challengers, is a strategy that appears to prioritise control over the party above control of Congress.
The effect on Capitol Hill
Even where Trump’s candidates win, the consequences may be destabilising. Some Republicans have acknowledged that Trump’s aggressive involvement in primaries could create complications, not least for members who are no longer worried about reelection. Senators in their final term, for example, might be emboldened to act independently knowing there is no electoral sword hanging over them.
But the more immediate effect is silence. Had Massie or Cornyn survived their primary challenge, more members of Congress might have been willing to vote against Trump’s interests. Their defeat sends the reverse signal. When a solid incumbent with a strong conservative record can be unseated for insufficient loyalty, other Republicans in Congress will be watching and calculating.
This is how party discipline can slide into something more troubling. It is one thing for a party leader to want to manage unwieldy factions but enforcing one’s authority via electoral intimidation is another matter.
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What is being challenged in these primaries are the remnants of what the Republican Party once was. This included a coalition of business conservatives, foreign policy hawks, libertarian-leaning figures and traditional social conservatives. Massie represented one strand of that tradition. Cornyn represented another. They have now been treated as enemies of the Maga agenda.
Historically, US election scholarship has suggested there may be a tendency in primaries to swing towards the party’s base, and then back in the direction of the median voter for the general election. In this new incarnation of the GOP, the pendulum appears stuck to the right.
During primary season, this may be an attractive Maga trait. But come November, not every GOP voter may cast their ballot for a cult of loyalty.
Police Scotland have now confirmed they will support the event.
Craig Meighan, Press Association Scotland and Gemma Ryder Reporter
22:56, 27 May 2026
The annual Edinburgh Taxi Outing for sick children looks set to go ahead after police agreed support for the event.
On Monday, it was announced that the outing had been “reluctantly” cancelled after organisers said a policy change left police officers unable to escort the cabs.
The annual event, organised and funded by taxi drivers, gives children with special needs, life-limiting conditions and terminal illnesses a day out where they are driven around the city in colourfully decorated taxis.
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It was due to be held for the 78th time on June 9, but outing committee secretary Keith Bell had said that organisers had “no option” but to cancel.
However, a statement by Police Scotland on Wednesday appears to confirm that the outing can go ahead as planned.
Superintendent Neil Wilson said: “Our focus throughout has been to support the Edinburgh Taxi Outing as we have done for many years.
“We have held constructive discussions today with the event organiser and have agreed an outline plan which allows the event to run safely on its original route.
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“Further discussions will take place in the coming days to finalise the police operation to support the event and ensure the children enjoy their day.”
Mr Bell previously said that a policy change meant officers would no longer escort such events through the streets of Edinburgh and East Lothian and that the taxi outing did not meet the new criteria for a police escort.
He had raised concerns about proposals for static support at key places, saying the children involved in the outing had “a variety of needs and some will not manage to cope with sitting stationary for who knows how long waiting for the taxis at the back to catch up”.
A final decision is expected to be confirmed during a meeting between the police, taxi drivers and the City of Edinburgh Council on Thursday.
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Plans to put up a pergola in the outdoor seating area of the Dark Horse Espresso Bar have been approved by City of York Council.
The business stated the plans would see it remain in keeping with the vibrant café culture of Bishopthorpe Road while also enhancing the area.
Council planning officers stated the changes would preserve the character and appearance of the street scene and there would be no additional impact on nearby households.
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The approved plans are set to see louvered pergola would be mounted on an outside wall and positioned above the outdoor seating area at the front of the building.
It would replace an existing umbrella which has struggled to stay up during strong winds while also providing shelter.
The pergola will be finished in dark grey metal to match the colour scheme of the outside of the building.
Plans stated the scale of the pergola was modest and it would not dominate the front of the building.
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The existing outdoor area of the Dark Horse Espresso Bar (Image: Supplied)
The application stated: “Bishopthorpe Road is a well-established and vibrant mixed-use high street, characterised by a variety of independent shops, cafés, and small commercial premises at ground floor level, with residential accommodation typically located above a few properties seen on the street.
“The street is widely recognised for its strong local identity and active frontage, contributing to a lively and well-used public realm.
“The proposal represents a modest and functional addition that supports the existing commercial use, enhances the quality of the outdoor seating provision, and responds appropriately to the character and activity of Bishopthorpe Road.
“The proposed pergola will provide shelter over the existing outdoor seating area, enhancing the usability and functionality of the space while respecting the active frontage and vibrant café culture of Bishopthorpe Road.”
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Mark Edwards, originally from Australia, and his York-born wife Laura received planning permission to convert the former kitchen showroom at 147, Bishopthorpe Road into a café in 2023.
They have run the Dark Horse Espresso Bar in Shambles Market since 2018.
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A temporary traffic regulation order has been issued for this Thursday (May 28) on Marine Road East from its junction with Broadway to its junction with Lord Street, from 6am to noon.
From noon until 6pm, the closure will move along Marine Road East between Lord Street and Northumberland Street.
A further order will affect several nearby side streets – Skipton Street, Back Crescent Street, Graham Street, Derby Street, Tunstall Street and Anderton Street – between 6pm and 8pm the same day, temporarily prohibiting any motor vehicle, cycle or pedestrian (except for filming staff and participants) from using those roads.
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Traffic signs on Marine Road state that residents’ access and businesses will be open as usual.
In a notice issued by Lancashire County Council, the authority said: “The police, fire and ambulance services have been informed and emergency access will be maintained at all times.
“The temporary prohibitions are necessary to enable the filming of the television series The Bay.
“The prohibitions will only be operative when indicated on site by the presence of the appropriate traffic signs in accordance with The Traffic Signs Regulations and General Directions 2016.
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“Diversions will be signed locally.”
A separate residents’ letter, seen by the Lancashire Telegraph, explains that the beginning of the filming day will be on Marine Road Central and Marine Road East, with an “action vehicle” driving away from Morecambe starting at the roundabout outside Buzz Bingo and down to Broadway, with “several goes” running the same sequence using different camera set‑ups.
The next stage of filming will take place on Marine Road Central between Northumberland Road and the Buzz Bingo roundabout, with two action vehicles driving along the front and then turning down Skipton Street and behind onto Back Crescent Street.
Derby Street and Graham Street will also be closed “to maintain maximum safety”, with residents told that foot access to their homes will be maintained throughout.
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Another traffic regulation order will prevent traffic and pedestrians from using the Coastal Road from the entrance to Cheyette Fitness to the junction with Elm Grove from 9am to 3pm on Thursday, June 11.
The cast and crew of the Morecambe‑based show, which stars Marsha Thomason as DS Jenn Townsend and Daniel Ryan as DI Tony Manning, recently returned to the town to shoot scenes for its sixth series.
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