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NewsBeat

We turned an old council house into one of Wales’ best homes

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Wales Online

Every home has a story and this one, which has just featured on television, is one of depression and drama thwarted by colour, artwork and family spaces to enjoy

Appearing on a television programme where three judges step inside your home and analyse it and compare it to other properties might seem like a daunting proposition but every year people across Wales start on that TV star journey.

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The destination is the popular and binge-worthy BBC Cymru Wales series Wales’ Home of the Year. The programme follows the judges, who are not scary at all, are presenter Owain Wyn Evans, architect Glen Thomas and designer Mandy Watkins around some of Wales most enchanting abode in each region to compete in the final to be crowned of Wales’ Home of the Year’

This year’s series began on Thursday, June 11, and the winner of the first episode is Sera and Ian’s colourful and welcoming ex-council house near Aberystwyth – but it’s a house that has become more than a home, through trauma and health issues, it’s become the couple’s sanctuary. For more property stories sent to your inbox twice a week sign up to the property newsletter here.

READ MORE: Time warp house with incredible interiors is like stepping into the past

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE: Wales’ Home of the Year 2024 winner went on a stag do and came home to find his home on the TV

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Sera says: “My husband had a heart attack in the February of the year we inherited the house, so it was left to me to finish everything. But I did get some help in from a really great guy called Darren, one of my friend’s step-dads who really helped me over the finish line.

“He was amazing, he helped so much because we didn’t have a proper working downstairs toilet for Ian, as he couldn’t, at that time, manage the stairs. So he really pulled out the bag for me, including tiling the floors and plumbing, because it’s those things Ian would have normally had done himself.”

While Darren got to work, Sera constructed the banquette seating in the sociable dining area as well as tacking the garden, which she says had six layers of patio slabs that she had to attack with a hammer drill and filled up six skips.

Even with all this team working hard on finishing the transformation, the day before the TV crew arrived the house was still not ready – Sera was still painting, her supportive friend was frantically cleaning, and there was still tidying to do including an open-shelving glass kitchen cabinet that the judges were so impressed to find.

The house was known to the couple as it was Ian’s family home where he grew up and bursting with childhood memories. When his mother sadly passed away, it wasn’t far to move as the couple were living in rented accommodation across the street to assist with Ian’s aging parents.

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When they moved in, the house was a vision in 1980s peach – a colour that made Ian’s mum feel happy and although not to Sera’s taste she is very understanding of that scenario because she says diving into colour has substantially helped her battle depression, but it was her best friend that started the colour wheel spinning.

Sera explains: “So everything in the house before we moved was very dark and very eclectic and at that point my depression was really bad. Even everything I wore was black because my whole outlook on life was very dark. She came into the house and said ‘it’s no wonder you feel like this, you’re living in a flipping cave!’.

“I felt very low at the time and it’s very hard to see beyond that until someone says something, I mean, ha, I was a bit offended at the time but now I’m thankful because I thought about it and she was completely right, so that’s when I started researching colour as a therapy, as well as going for therapy too.

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The result is a home where Sera feels cocooned, uplifted and happy. She says: “So you can create a home that makes you feel comfortable with colours that have a positive effect on you, make you feel better and mine was down to a lot of reading up on colour therapy.”

The use of colour, pattern and moments of visual delight inside Sera’s house was what really appealed to the judges and resulted in the couple’s house winning the Mid Wales and Valleys regional heat to go through to the grand final at the end of the series, due to aired on

From the garden gate this standard ex-council house sings its true colours of being inviting, offering a welcoming ambience, and hugging every single visitor, and that starts even in the front garden where the couple have constructed a very inviting pergola seating area where Sera says friends passing usually pop in and join them at the table.

Sera enjoys thinking about and investigating interior design and says you don’t have to even be any good at it, as long as your home makes you happy.

“Even from a young age, I would move my bedroom around as much as possible, and my parents were like, ‘what you up to now?!’ And I advise anyone to jump into it, you don’t have to make a profession out of it, for me it’s a hobby. I like to move things about. I like to change things up a bit. And I think you can be open to change, things will develop and change over time anyway.”

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When the couple moved in they white-washed the whole house to get a feel for the space, light and atmosphere and then the transformation began and went at full throttle.

Sera laughs: “I didn’t do it room by room, I’m not sensible like that, I went full-blown in and, you know, trashed the whole house, but yeah, no, I’m an all or nothing person. I definitely knew I needed to change things, like we put the patio doors in because it was always very dark and I knew I wanted glass doors, I didn’t want the internal doors to feel like a block.”

One of the features pointed out by the judges was the glass fronted cupboard in the kitchen. Sera says when they moved in the kitchen was tiny and had a pantry and ‘pram parking space’ where years ago a baby’s large and bulky pram could be stored.

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The cramped areas all went to create a larger space and the result is an uplifting galley kitchen featuring fresh white, natural textures, Sera’s favourite patio doors and her favourite colour; green.

Although the palette is varied inside Sera and Ian’s home it centres around core colours with varying tones and shades throughout peppered with ‘pops’ of colour. Many people begin a room’s scheme, or overall style for a house, by being inspired by an item and for Sera it’s artwork, which you see featured in every space.

Another feature highlighted in the programme was the banquette seating which Sera made herself under the watchful eye and guidance of the still recovering Ian, and it is her favourite area of the house, where she can gather with her family, her sister and her sister’s grandchildren.

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The bathroom added to the judge’s comments, especially the bath angled across the corner with a massive banana plant creating a bending and cocooning hood over the water, making the occupant feel like they are bathing in a tropical pond.

Although this sounds fantastically creative Sera reveals the secret – it was the only way to fit in a shower, a toilet and a bath and still be able to open the door! But this inspiring yet modest woman with a talent for interiors has made a stand-out feature from a head-scratching space problem.

She says: “People say, ‘oh it’s wonderful, it’s amazing’ but it’s just a small council house, just like the thousands of council houses across the country. But I’ve learned so much doing this, so I hope I can inspire others to see what a council house can be and can show you don’t need a huge budget, you just need things that uplift you and colours that make you feel happy within your little tiny, weeny little home.”

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Episode one is now available to view on BBC iPlayer, along with the four remaining regional heats, with the final due to be broadcast on BBC Cymru Wales on Thursday, July 16.

For more property, renovation, and interior design stories join our Amazing Welsh Homes Facebook group here.

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Lewis Hamilton puts himself into title fight with first Ferrari victory

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Lewis Hamilton puts himself into title fight with first Ferrari victory

Russell conceded afterwards that he would have, adding that he felt his former teammate was now in this title fight. “The pace today was insane from Lewis, so yeah, they [Ferrari] are coming, I think,” he said.

It does look as if Hamilton might be at least. This was his first win in 686 days (since the 2024 Belgian GP), his first time crossing the line in first place in 707 days (since the 2024 British GP), and it leaves him 41 points behind Antonelli in second place in the championship, with Russell a further nine points behind.

Hamilton appeared to be choking up over the radio as he returned his car to the pits.

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“Grazie tutti to everyone at Maranello,”  Hamilton told his team as he returned his car to the pits. “I can’t thank you enough. I’m so proud of you. And to my family, I love you. And to my fans, thank you for reminding me who I am. I couldn’t have done this without you.”

More to follow…

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Heartbreak for Emma Raducanu after Queen’s Club final defeat

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Heartbreak for Emma Raducanu after Queen’s Club final defeat

It took the new champion a few moments to gather her thoughts, but she was full of praise for her opponent: “Wow. First of all congrats Emma on such a great week, you’re such an incredible player and I wish you and your team all the best for the remainder of the grass season.”

“This really is my favourite time of the year, my favourite surface and I really made the most of it this week],” she added. “I’ll see you guys in two weeks, thanks for all your support.”

She continued: “[I’ve been dreaming of this for] the last couple of years, for sure. [After the first set] I was thinking, I won 6-0 that’s kind of a curse in tennis, but [Raducanu] really stepped up, she played some amazing tennis, just try to stay with her, make her serve it out, try to play every single ball. To be honest, her last service game and the tiebreak is still a bit of a blur.”

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Pretty Norfolk pub set in deer park crowned the ‘best in the UK’

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Cambridgeshire Live

The gorgeous restaurant can be found within a 1,000-acre Georgian deer park

A pub hidden in the North Norfolk countryside has been crowned as “the best in the UK” following its triumph at the 2026 National Pub & Bar Awards. The Gunton Arms, in Thorpe Market near Cromer, is a charming pub set within a pretty Georgian park.

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The award-winning pub can be found in Gunton Park, a 1,000-acre deer park. The park won an award in 2021 for restoration efforts which returned the park to the way it would have been in Georgian times.

These beautiful surroundings mean that deer are often spotted from inside the pub.

Owned by Ivor Braka and overseen by husband and wife team Stuart and Simone Tattershall, The Gunton Arms is a traditional pub with 16 bedrooms.

Leading the kitchen is Stuart, previously head chef at Mark Hix, who cooks from local ingredients over a fire grill, including venison from the deer park. The restaurant also utilises fresh seafood, mussels, and the renowned Cromer crab and lobster caught by local fishermen.

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Having opened in October 2011, Mr Braka’s history as an art dealer makes for a pub and grounds that blends rustic charm with contemporary art and eccentric luxury. Inside, guests will find works by Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst.

Reacting to the accolade, chef Stuart said “I’m gobsmacked”. He added: “Absolutely incredible to be mentioned in the same breath as so many of these people at the awards. It’s a credit to the team at The Gunton and the great county of Norfolk. Our guests have really supported us and been really kind to us, so after 15 years to get this is a massive achievement.”

The menu changes daily, depending on the local produce which is available and seasonable. Although, some items on the sample menu include a farmhouse chicken, leek and bacon pie, pork and leek sausages with mash and onion gravy and a barbecue beef brisket served with chips and slaw.

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On Sundays, roast dinner is offered and desserts range from a white chocolate cheesecake with Norfolk strawberry to an apricot and almond tart served with clotted cream.

The Gunton Arms was selected as number one ahead of 252 other pubs and bars from across the UK, all of which had been shortlisted to represent their respective counties at the annual event.

Other awards on the night were the Pub Group of the Year and Bar Group of the Year. All of the 2026 National Pub & Bar Awards winners, including County and Regional, can be found here.

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How to watch Ivory Coast vs Ecuador FOR FREE: TV channel and live stream for World Cup today

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How to watch Ivory Coast vs Ecuador FOR FREE: TV channel and live stream for World Cup today

The Elephants have been crowned kings of Africa twice since last qualifying for the World Cup in 2014 and will be eager to make up for lost time at this summer’s showpiece event.

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Madness frontman Suggs looking forward to big Newmarket Nights show

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Cambridgeshire Live

Madness is bringing their cheeky ska-pop show to Newmarket Nights this summer

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They burst into the charts as part of the burgeoning 70s 2 Tone scene before cementing their status as bona fide pop royalty. More than 40 years later, Madness are still as popular – and bonkers – as ever, and they’ll be playing to another packed-out crowd when they bring their cheeky ska-pop show to Newmarket Nights this summer.

The ‘Nutty Boys’, as they became known, ruled the charts in the late 70s and early 80s with quirky, infectious radio favourites such as Baggy Trousers, Embarrassment, Shut Up and House Of Fun. And their unwavering commitment to being as serious about being silly as they are about the serious matter of songwriting means they’re in demand as much as ever.

“The race meeting thing is such an amazing phenomenon,” said Madness frontman Suggs as he looked ahead to the band’s Newmarket Nights appearance on July 17. “I remember the first time, a long time ago now, when our manager said ‘we’ve got this idea of having a little meeting and a band on afterwards’.

“I’m thinking ‘what if the old man’s done all his dough? He’s halfway there and back again – is he really going to want to go and see a band?’ But that’s the sort of role we fit. Regardless of what’s happened, we’re going to have a good time. It’s a great privilege – it’s something we started out doing and still do.”

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The Newmarket show is just one of a number of big outdoor gigs they’ll be playing at home and in Europe this summer – quite remarkable for a band which can trace its roots way back to 1976. And their longevity, says Suggs, is down to the fact that they’re all mates and they like having a chuckle.

“It’s extraordinary,” he said. “I’ve got a lot of contemporaries from when we started out, and a lot of them split up. “But we were all friends from school. The premise was always to have a laugh and enjoy yourself.

“It’s not that we weren’t serious about making music and songwriting and all of that, but getting along and having a good time is what really keeps the old boat afloat. It’s always been the same. When we started out playing in pubs, if you didn’t entertain, you wouldn’t be asked back.

“It’s a reciprocal thing. The way the audience dig what we do energises you. People really enjoy what we do.”

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The music industry could be brutal back in the 80s – one minute you could be the hot ticket, the next you were yesterday’s men.

Madness know that scenario well enough. Changing styles and trends led to their split in 1986, seemingly drawing a line under their crazy capers forever.

“We were the biggest band of the 80s then in about 1986 we started to not be,” said Suggs. “Our keyboard player left, he was a very fundamental part of the band and we packed up for a bit, thinking that was that. I was retired when I was 26!

“Then in 1992 someone asked us to do a festival in North London called Madstock and 70,000 people turned up! Suddenly the tide can change when you think it’s all over. And from then on, we ain’t looked back. Apart from having all the hits – that’s something no one can take away and it’s not like every band has had 25 top 10 hits or whatever – people pay their fiver or £500 or whatever to see you and if you perform, they’ll ask you back.

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“And we’ve always been performers as much as musicians, so I think that’s been part of the longevity.”

The band’s videos during their heyday were legendary. Costumes, props, band members flying through the air… you never knew what was going to come next.

“I think one day there’ll be a section in the V and A Museum,” joked Suggs. “They’re works of art, those videos. There was no MTV or anything. Our record company boss said ‘you’re so theatrical, why don’t you make little films?’

“We’d sit around coming up with the most ridiculous ideas and then he’d go ‘we can only afford a van, an armchair and a car falling out of the sky’ and we’d work out what we could actually afford to do in two days. But there was this costumier in Camden Town called Berman and Nathan’s who did all the big films that let us take anything we wanted.

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“It wasn’t a fancy dress shop – they had real copper’s uniforms. Can you imagine the fun we had in North London? ‘Ello, ‘ello, ‘ello, what’s going on here then?

“Especially when we burst into The Clash’s dressing room in Regents Park and you could hear the sound of doors slamming and toilets flushing! They never spoke to us for five years!

“I think when we fizzled out in the 80s it was because we’d run out of things to dress up as. We’d been flowers, coppers, exploding traffic wardens, cowboys…. It was a unique phenomenon. We were all quite extrovert.

“Some bands found it quite embarrassing to make a fool of themselves but we always felt you had to take being stupid as seriously as being serious. So we really got into it.

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“Because there were seven of us, if you wanted to get on Top of the Pops, you had to do something extraordinary to get in the video in the first place, so we were trying to outdo each other all the time. But we were having fun! There weren’t no stylists or people telling us how to behave.

“When you see us laughing and joking, we are literally laughing and joking at ourselves and I think that resonates in the way the music does when you’re playing live. You can see when it’s authentic.”

With that zany showmanship still very much in play, the bookings keep coming and the fans keep turning up in numbers.

“Our sax player, Lee, said the other day – it’s like that song from The Eagles,” said Suggs. “You can check out any time you like but you can never leave. When will it end? When will the audience stop asking us to come back?

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“We were supposed to have a quiet year this year but they keep asking us back! I’ve got a friend who’s a promoter. He had us on last year and he said ‘to be honest Suggs, I’ve got this bill and they’re all really boring! We need you to come along and liven it up!’

“No one could have foreseen this. We couldn’t have. But it’s the phenomenon of being in a band. You start off messing around and you think ‘oh this song’s not bad’.

“Then you get a gig in a pub and think ‘brilliant, that’s it, we’ve made it’. Then you make a record and it goes on and on and on.”

Newmarket Nights features a summer-long programme of top acts performing at Newmarket Racecourses after an evening of horse racing. This year’s programme also includes Five (June 19); Basement Jaxx (June 26); Aitch (July 31); Jessie J (August 7); Craig David TS5 (August 14) and Kaiser Chiefs (August 22).

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For further information, including to book tickets, click here.

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Council visits 70 caravans at Traveller site to check planning and safety compliance

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Cambridgeshire Live

The visit was intended to check that all laws and regulations are being met

Around 70 caravans at a Traveller site were visited by South Cambridgeshire District Council (SCDC) on Wednesday, June 10. The visit was to ensure regulations at Smithy Fen, Cottenham, are being met.

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Smithy Fen is a well-established Gypsy and Traveller site, with a planning condition at individual plots that caravans should be lived in by Gypsy and Traveller people.

“Caravans at the site also need to comply with The Caravan Sites and Control of Development Act 1960 which regulates caravan sites across the UK and gives local authorities control over where and how caravans are used,” a spokesperson for SCDC said.

“This legislation considers health, safety, and living conditions for people staying in caravans. It includes areas such as spacing between units, water supply, drainage, toilets, fire safety and electrical systems.”

The spokesperson said language support was provided and police were present to provide support. Information gathered from the visit will now be assessed and if breaches are identified, the council said it will follow “lawful and proportionate” processes to address them.

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Councillor Laurence Damary-Homan, Lead Cabinet Member for Environment at South Cambridgeshire District Council, said: “We want to make sure the site is safe for everyone, and where it is not, make sure we have the necessary information to try and take action.

“The Council is committed to engaging with all residents in a fair and respectful way, and this fact‑finding work will help gather the information needed to support safe, lawful and inclusive communities.”

Cllr Damary-Homan continued: “The next step is to review all the information gathered. Any future actions will be guided by the findings of the visit. We remain committed to ensuring that authorised sites are safe places to live.

“The timeline to take any appropriate action is governed by the legal process – we must ensure we thoroughly assess the information we have gathered and follow the necessary steps to get the best outcome that is fair and right by all our residents.”

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Tyrone v Mayo LIVE score updates the sides go in level at half-time

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Belfast Live

After a dramatic day in the Championship yesterday, the final second round game of the weekend sees Tyrone host Mayo in Round 2A.

A place in the All-Ireland SFC quarter-final is the prize for the winners.

The losers won’t exit the Championship, but they’ll have to navigate an additional game to make the last eight and head into tomorrow morning’s Round Three draw.

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As Donegal have already played Kerry, the losers of today’s game would have a one in three chance of facing the Kingdom next weekend.

That alone, plus the extra week of rest and recovery, should be enough incentive for Tyrone and Mayo this afternoon.

Trying to predict which versions of each team we’ll see in Omagh is another matter.

The Red Hands finished fifth in Division Two, but they appear to have turned a corner in the Championship.

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After taking Armagh to extra-time in the Ulster preliminary round, they defeated Connacht champions Roscommon in Dr Hyde Park in round one.

Mayo lost to Roscommon in Connacht before claiming a hard-fought one-point win over Monaghan last time out.

They’ll be AFL prospect Kobe McDonald can continue to impress while a lot of the pre-match focus will centre around whether or not Darragh Canavan will be added to the Tyrone squad having been named as a standby player on Friday.

Mayo, under the interim management of Stephen Rochford, were seven point winners over Tyrone at this venue in the 2025 Championship.

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This is a real acid test for both teams to ascertain how much, if any, tangible progress they’ve made since last May.

We’ll have all the build-up and team news ahead of throw-in at 3.30pm.

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Nigel Farage condemned over claims Britain is a ‘two tier state against white people’

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Nigel Farage condemned over claims Britain is a ‘two tier state against white people’

Nigel Farage, the leader of Reform UK and MP for Clacton, has outlined a radical policy proposal, stating his party would evict all foreign nationals from social housing should they gain power.

Writing in his inaugural Substack essay on Sunday, Mr Farage asserted that Britain has become a “two-tier state against white people”.

He also reiterated his commitment to “repeal the Equality Act” under a Reform government. To support his claims, Mr Farage referenced the murder of student Henry Nowak, who was handcuffed by police as he lay dying after his killer, Vickrum Digwa, claimed to have been the victim of a racist attack. He concluded that the “British state is no longer working for everyone in this country”.

His essay, titled “Britain is a Two Tier State – Against White People”, makes a series of points about how he claims “there is nothing fair about the way white people have been treated by their governments”.

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Housing, healthcare, education, policing, the military and the workplace are all listed as being adversely affected by what he describes as “deeply anti-white racism”.

“Across public and economic life, the power of the Government has been brought to bear on tackling ‘inequalities’, in a narrow and specific sense,” Mr Farage wrote.

“Anything which is seen to disadvantage a minority group is cracked down on.

“Anything which benefits a minority and damages the white British is likely to be left alone.”

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On the topic of housing, he said that during the last century, “rules which gave priority to local people and ties to the area were stripped away”.

He said that, under a Reform government, foreign nationals in social housing would be given a three-month grace period to relocate to private rented accommodation, or lose their right to remain in the country and be liable for deportation.

Appearing on Sky News, culture secretary Lisa Nandy said Mr Farage “should take his nasty hate and anger and division somewhere else, frankly”.

“I think people want hope,” she added.

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“They don’t want more anger, they don’t want more division, they don’t want more hate, and I wish he’d just take it somewhere else.

“There are serious challenges that this country faces.

“People have not felt listened to or heard.

“Living standards haven’t improved for too long.

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“People want better, they want more.”

Lisa Nandy
Lisa Nandy (Getty)

Mr Farage wrote that he was launching the Substack so he could set out his views in his own words to avoid them being “twisted and misrepresented”, promising to publish a “long essay” each month.

Reform MP Suella Braverman said she was “very proud” to read Mr Farage’s piece, adding: “I believe that white people are treated more unfairly than non-white people.”

Appearing on Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips on Sky News, she said: “The tragic murder of Henry Nowak has to be a wake-up call that white people were told by the police to be treated differently to non-white people, and saying that is not divisive.”

Ms Braverman, who defected to Reform after leaving the Conservatives and standing down as home secretary, said she was the first Tory minister to give a speech outlining problems in the Equality Act, “daring to challenge the status quo”, and this was one of the reasons she left the party.

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“We’re saying that the institutions, the laws, and the high-level policies in this country treat white people less fairly than non-white people,” Ms Braverman said.

Nandy added she hopes Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham wins next week’s Makerfield by-election.

“I hope he comes back to Westminster to help us bring the issues that matter to people right up front and centre as part of this Government,” Ms Nandy added.

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Slow and building traffic on the A64 from York to Flaxton

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Slow and building traffic on the A64 from York to Flaxton

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Extra police patrols trailed at Old Station Park, Horwich

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Extra police patrols trailed at Old Station Park, Horwich

Pollice announced this weekend that the reports had centred around Old Station Park in Horwich, with several cases of anti-social behaviour having been raised.

In response, officers say they have plans to increase their patrols around the park and they have encouraged members of the public with any information or concerns to contact them.

A Greater Manchester Police spokesperson said: “Officers from the Horwich neighbourhood policing team have been made aware of a number of issues involving anti-social behaviour on Old Station Park.

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“Abuse towards members of the public using the park will not be tolerated and action will be taken against any individuals identified as being involved.

“Plans are in place to increase patrols in the area.”

Old Station Park has previously been at the centre of concerns about anti-social behaviour.

In December last year United Utilities said they believed an “unknown third party” had damaged water drains leading to flooding.

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Anyone with any further information or concerns can call police on 101 or 999 in the event of an emergency.

Alternatively, members of the public can call independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

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