Seven years after Avengers: Endgame broke box office records – and the hearts of fans around the world – Marvel has put together yet another epic big-screen crossover event.
Avengers: Doomsday marks the fifth instalment in the Avengers franchise, and is expected to be the cinema event of 2026, bringing back some of our favourite characters and introducing a whole new roster of superheroes to the MCU.
With months to go until the release, fans already have plenty of questions about the upcoming release. Namely, who is in the star-studded cast? What exactly is the plot of Avengers: Doomsday? And how did one actor’s abrupt departure lead to the entire film being rethought?
Here’s everything we can tell you about Avengers: Doomsday so far…
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What is Avengers: Doomsday about?
Marvel has already teased that Avengers: Doomsday will mark the beginning of the end for its multiverse saga, which began in 2021 with the TV series WandaVision.
Although there is official plot details are still being kept under wraps, the studio has said that the Phase Six movie sees “beloved heroes from three distinct universes” embarking on “a deadly collision course” and facing “an existential threat unlike anything they’ve ever encountered”.
In other words, we should expect to see characters from The Avengers, Thunderbolts, X-Men and Fantastic Four all teaming up to defeat the evil Doctor Doom.
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The cast of Fantastic Four: First Steps will all be returning for the new Avengers film
“We’re not talking too much about story, but I think people know that the story of Doomsday is inspired by a very famous comic run in which universes are colliding and Earths encounter one another and different timelines encounter one another,” Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige teased to Entertainment Weekly in April this year.
Who is in the cast of Avengers: Doomsday, and which Marvel stars are returning?
In March last year, Marvel hosted a mammoth five-hour livestream where they slowly revealed the sprawling cast of Avengers: Doomsday, which includes some of the biggest names in Hollywood – and pretty much anyone who has ever appeared in a Marvel film.
Meanwhile, Florence Pugh, David Harbour, Lewis Pullman and Wyatt Russell will be representing Thunderbolts*, while The Fantastic Four’s Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss-Bachrach will also be making their Avengers debut in Doomsday.
The biggest shock of them all came when stars from the X-Men films of the early 2000s were revealed to be joining MCU characters in Avengers: Doomsday.
Due to legal reasons, the Avengers and X-Men have never been able to share the screen together until recently.
Historically, 20th Century Fox had held the film rights to X-Men, stopping any potential crossovers, but since Disney’s acquisition of Marvel Studios, and then Fox, the two superhero groups can now appear on screen together (as evidenced in last year’s Deadpool & Wolverine).
As Wakanda serves as a major tactical and narrative hub, expect your favourite Black Panther characters to also appear in the upcoming film, too.
Letitia Wright in the first Black Panther film in 2018
Marvel/Disney/Kobal/Shutterstock
Simu Liu will also be back as Shang-Chi, for the first time since 2021′s Shang-Chi And The Legend Of The Ten Rings.
Meanwhile, because no one ever truly stays dead in the MCU, Chris Evans will be returning as Captain America, although the circumstances around his comeback remain shrouded in mystery.
“I said I would only come back if there was a real reason, and in Doomsday, there’s a very real reason why these heroes need Steve Rogers,” Chris Evans revealed at this year’s CinemaCon, with Hayley Atwell also expected to return as Steve’s beloved SHIELD agent Peggy.
And talking of the dead never staying dead in the MCU, Robert Downey Jr. is back, too – only this time, it’s not as Tony Stark…
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Yes, Robert Downey Jr. is actually returning to the MCU for Avengers: Doomsday
The new Avengers film’s main antagonist – a genius scientist from the fictional Latveria, who seeks world domination – first made a cameo in the post-credits of last year’s Fantastic Four: First Steps, although at the time, his identity remained hidden behind his iconic mask.
Robert’s last Marvel film was 2019′s Avengers: Endgame, in which his character Tony Stark sacrificed himself to save the world.
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In March 2025, the directors of Avengers: Doomsday told Variety that the Oscar winner had been “immersed” in his new character, and was heavily involved in the creative process.
“He’s writing backstory, costume ideas,” Joe Russo said about Robert’s commitment to the franchise. “We were just on the phone with him this morning before we got here talking about it. He just loves really rich three-dimensional characters. He sees a real opportunity here with the character.”
Kevin Feige shared that Robert has been “ingrained in the fabric” of the MCU for so long that they couldn’t help but “talk about when and how and if there could be a return”.
However, when asked how the idea of bringing Robert back as Doom came about, he did tell Entertainment Weekly in April this year that: “It’s our universe. It’s a multiverse. We can do whatever the heck we want. He played the most iconic hero. Let’s have him play the most iconic villain.”
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Robert recently spoke to CBR alongside Joe Russo, and revealed that this film “landed in a place that I think will more than suffice” for fans.
“It’s not even about how I executed it,” the Oscar winner actor added. “It’s about the way it’s been structured, and the other characters.
“There’s something going on in Doomsday and forward that is literally the only antidote to: How do you not have these films be let down after an Infinity War and an Endgame? And boy, have we laboured long and hard to bring that down.”
As for why Doom’s face looks so similar to Tony Stark, we’ll have to wait until Avengers: Doomsday is released to find that out…
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Jonathan Majors was also originally supposed to appear in Avengers: Doomsday, but his 2023 arrest led to major changes to the movie
Jonathan Majors in Ant-Man And The Wasp: Quantumania
After the heroes defeated Thanos in Avengers: Endgame, Kang looked set to play the newest big bad, with numerous appearances for Jonathan Majors having been slated.
In fact, Avengers: Doomsday was originally called Avengers: The Kang Dynasty, and was set to revolve around Jonthan’s time-travelling, multiverse-hopping superhuman character.
However, after Jonathan was arrested in 2023 under charges of strangulation, assault and harassment, Marvel was forced to drastically rethink their fifth Avengers film.
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Jonathan was eventually found guilty of one count of reckless assault in the third degree, and a charge of harassment as a violation. In April 2024, he was sentenced to 52 weeks of a domestic violence intervention program and probation.
Despite the controversy around Jonathan’s exit from the Marvel universe, studio boss Kevin Feige has always maintained that the pivot from Kang to Doom as a central villain was an entirely creative one.
“We had started even before what had happened to the actor happened, we had started to realise that Kang wasn’t big enough, wasn’t Thanos, and that there was only one character that could be that, because he was that in the comics for decades and decades,” he told The Hollywood Reporter in the summer of last year.
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Who is directing Avengers: Doomsday?
Robert Downey Jr. with Avengers: Doomsday directors Joe and Anthony Russo
Destin Daniel Cretton, the director of Marvel’s Shang-Chi And The Legend Of The Ten Rings and Wonder Man, was first set to helm the film, back when it was still being referred to as The Kang Dynasty.
In November 2023, Deadline reported that Destin had left the project to pursue other Marvel projects, including the upcoming Spider-Man: Brand New Day.
Taking over from Destin are brothers Anthony and Joe Russo, who previously directed the Captain America films The Winter Soldier and Civil War, as well as the Avengers films Infinity War and Endgame.
Originally, the Russo brothers turned down the chance to direct both Avengers: Doomsday and its sequel, Secret Wars, due to the strain and energy of making such epic blockbusters.
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“Robert [Downey Jr] tried to talk us into doing it and we said, ‘No’,” Joe Russo revealed to Omlete last year. “We just didn’t have a story. We didn’t have a way in, right? We were resistant for a while.
“And then one day [Endgame writer] Steve McFeely, who’s one of our key collaborators, said, ‘I have an idea.’ And we went, ’That’s the story. That story has to be told. It’s a really powerful story.”
The brothers have been tight-lipped about the film’s finer details, although they did tease: “We love villains who think they’re the heroes of their own stories. That’s when they become three-dimensional and when they become more interesting.
“And when you have an actor like Robert Downey, you have to create a well-shaped three-dimensional character for the audience.”
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Is there a trailer for Avengers: Doomsday?
Marvel has slowly been releasing teaser trailers for Avengers: Doomsday, each of them themed around a different hero.
At CinemaCon in April, they did release a trailer for the press – and industry pros lost their minds over it.
Back in December, an official teaser premiered, depicting Chris Evans’ Steve Rogers in full dad mode, cradling a baby above a crib, hinting that in his alternate universe, he and Peggy got their happy-ever-after ending.
A second trailer saw the X-Men back in comic-appropriate attire, featuring Ian McKellen back as Magneto alongsidde Patrick Stewart’s Professor Charles Xavier and James Marsden as Cyclops.
Following this, a third teaser depicted the return of Chris Hemsworth as Thor, calling on his father Odin to help in the upcoming war.
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The most recent trailer brought us a crossover between Wakanda and the Fantastic Four, with the short clip featuring Ben Grimm, AKA The Thing, introducing himself to the Wakanadans.
Is there a release date for Avengers: Doomsday?
Avengers: Doomsday is officially scheduled to release in cinemas on 18 December 2026.
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If this date sounds familiar, that’s because it is also when Dune: Part Three is also scheduled to hit cinemas.
This has already caused upset among fans and cinema owners, who have voiced their concerns that the clash could cause audiences to pick just one film to see on opening night, as well as limiting IMAX screenings.
Are there any other Avengers films in the works?
An Avengers: Doomsday sequel, Avengers: Secret Wars, will hit cinemas almost a year to the day later, on 17 December 2027.
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If you can’t wait until then, Spider-Man: Brand New Day swings into cinemas on 31 July 2026 – and promises to introduce plot points and characters from the upcoming Doomsday movie.
Asked whether Alonso’s stature within the game will help Chelsea’s players buy into his methods, he replied: “Yeah, most definitely. He’s a manager like that, an ex-player as well, coming in and automatically you can just feel the presence, knowing what he is going to demand and we are all excited to work with him.”
Allan Finnegan has died aged 59, with his family paying an emotional tribue on Father’s Day
A Britain’s Got Talent semi‐finalist who balanced life as a Baptist minister with a successful stand‐up career has died aged 59.
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Allan Finnegan, from Bootle, rose to national attention during the 2020 series of the ITV show, winning over millions with his gentle humour and warm stage presence. Praised by judges as a “breath of fresh air”, he continued to serve his congregation at Emmanuel Baptist Church while performing comedy across the country, reports Lancs Live.
Confirming the 59-year-old’s passing on Instagram on Father’s Day, Allan’s family stated: “It is with great sadness that our family share the devastating news that our amazing, caring, funny, Husband, Dad, Grandad, Son, Father-in-law, Church Minister, and Comedian, Allan, went home to be with his Lord and Saviour at 9:10pm on Friday 19th June 2026. He bravely fought so hard to battle cancer for almost 5 years.
“We have the most precious memories as a family and will love and miss him so much. Joyce, Rachael and Beckie were with him in his final moments, playing some of his favourite music and as his favourite song, Pink Floyd’s ‘Wish You Were Here’ started playing, Allan opened his eyes and peacefully took his last breath.
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“It was an incredibly heartbreaking moment, but also a very precious and beautiful one for our family. Joyce, Rachael, Beckie, Danny, Josh, Albie and Linda give thanks for Allan’s incredible life and faithful witness.
“We would like to to thank each and everyone of you for your support, love and amazing generosity during Allan’s battle. We are eternally grateful to you all, as this gave Allan precious extra time to spend with his family and new grandson, Albie. Be blessed.”
Allan’s passing follows a five-year struggle with cancer, during which his positive spirit consistently remained evident. In 2022, Allan experienced ‘flashes’ in his vision and was sent to St Paul’s Eye Hospital, where growths were found in both eyes.
Allan received a diagnosis of ocular melanoma, an exceptionally uncommon type of cancer. The malignancy was eliminated, but it later spread to his liver, and in December 2023, Allan learnt that it was incurable.
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After his diagnosis, he was informed he had merely 12 months remaining, reports the Liverpool Echo, yet, through a GoFundMe appeal was able to obtain innovative treatments which enabled him to survive longer than medical professionals anticipated. Reflecting on his terminal diagnosis in 2025, Allan told the Liverpool Echo: “You can sit and wallow and don’t get me wrong, there have been days when I’ve done that kind of thing, but I’ve been trying to change that mindset so you don’t just go into a spiral. It’s not always easy, but I try to think that every day is a gift from now on.
“I’m on borrowed time, aren’t I? Or extra time, Fergie time was what they used to call it. We’re always going to do things in the future – you say, when I get to this stage in my life I’ll do this etc. I don’t think that way anymore.”
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Questions remain unanswered about the horrific Bedford train crash that left one person dead and 100 injured, as investigators continue to work to establish the cause of the crash.
Emergency services were called to the railway line between Bedford and Luton on Friday after reports of a collision involving two East Midlands Railway (EMR) services.
One train struck the rear of another on the same line shortly after 5pm.
The scene after two East Midlands Railway trains were involved in a collision
PA Wire
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Twenty-eight people remain in hospital, including nine in a critical condition. One person — the driver of one of the trains — sadly died following the crash.
He has since been named as 60-year-old Shaun Burton. His family say they are “devastated” by his loss, as they expressed their sympathies for all those affected by the crash.
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander has said works are being carried out to understand the circumstances of the crash so that “lessons are learned”.
When asked about the potential cause of the collision, she said: “It is too early to speculate and that’s why it’s so important that the inspectors from the rail accident investigation branch were there very quickly.”
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The Standard has put together a list of the questions around the crash that are yet to be answered.
Why did the first train stop?
Investigators are understood to be examining why the first train — the Nottingham to London service — came to a halt on the tracks near Elstow, just minutes after leaving Bedford.
Early reports indicate a possible technical fault, although this has not yet been officially confirmed.
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Why did the second train also not stop?
At the same time, investigators are also looking into why the second train was unable to stop after the line became obstructed.
Modern British railways have safety systems in place to prevent incidents of this kind.
As part of the inquiry, officials will examine whether the driver of the second train received the correct information and adequate warning, as well as whether the train’s braking systems operated properly and how effectively the safety mechanisms performed.
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Was there a signal failure?
The Rail Accidents Investigations Bureau will also consider whether there was a possible signal failure that caused the crash.
Investigators will probe whether the signals correctly indicated the track ahead was occupied; whether a signalling fault occurred and whether control centres had accurate information about train positions.
Tony Miles, a rail journalist, said on Sky News: “Were the signals showing red and the train went past them?
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“Or were the signals showing that the line was clear, and if so, how were they able to know when the train in front was stopped?”
Was there a fault with one of the trains?
One of the trains involved was a relatively new Aurora fleet unit, investigators have confirmed.
Data recorders, often referred to as “black boxes,” will be downloaded and analysed to determine a timeline of events leading up to the collision.
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They will focus on braking performance, onboard computer logs, communications systems, and any technical faults in the lead-up to the collision.
Could there have been a human error?
There is currently no evidence to suggest driver error, though investigators will need to rule it out as part of their inquiries.
They will also examine communications between the driver and the signaller, along with whether factors such as fatigue, workload pressures, or inadequate training may have contributed to the incident.
“WE were never meant to be a band that had hits,” muses Andy McCluskey. “When Tony Wilson told us: ‘You’re the future of pop’, we said ‘Pardon?’ Nobody was more surprised than us when we were on Top of the Pops.”
Nearly 50 years after Andy and childhood pal Paul Humphreys started experimenting with old tape recorders and called themselves Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, the synth pop pioneers are on the road with their Summer of Hits tour.
Following last year’s success of the re-mastered Crush album, OMD are celebrating the crowd-pleasers, in captivating shows packed with hits.
Andy McCluskey
Having seen them devote an entire concert to Architecture and Morality, I ask if set lists can be a tricky balance of album tracks, new material and pop bangers. Last year’s release of the re-mastered Crush album was a US success, and in 2023 OMD released a new album, the acclaimed Bauhaus Staircase, “which would’ve been Number 1 if it wasn’t for Taylor Swift,” smiles Andy.
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“Every year is a 40th anniversary of something – this year’s it’s The Pacific Age (OMD’s seventh album).” he says. “People love the albums but we have to perform the hits too. This tour is about the hits.”
And what gems they are! Since debut single Electricity in 1979, OMD have led the way in British electronic music, selling 25 million singles and 15 million albums worldwide.
Their hits, including Enola Gay, Souvenir, Messages, Joan Of Arc, Locomotion, She’s Leaving and Tesla Girls, are a dreamy blend of haunting melancholy and upbeat synth pop. Seminal 1981 album Architecture and Morality established them as one of the UK’s most influential electro-pop acts, inspiring the likes of Depeche Mode, The Killers and Moby.
Back in the day, they were on Top of The Pops a whopping 29 times. “Our last appearance was the same day the Spice Girls’ first,” says Andy. “I finally got my 30th Top of the Pops in 2000 – thanks to Atomic Kitten.”
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OMD
Creating a girl group might not seem the most likely career move for a musician who started out emulating Kraftwerk, but when Andy founded Atomic Kitten in 1998 it was a vehicle for his pop songwriting. He wrote their biggest hit, Whole Again, in 2001, earning him an Ivor Novello Award nomination. “I love a good pop band and I had a blast with Atomic Kitten,” says Andy. “I’m still in touch with Kerry (Katona), I spoke to her the other week. She’s great fun.”
By the mid-90s, OMD had called it a day. “I was banging my head on the wall,” says Andy. “It was the age of Britpop and grunge, nothing was as unfashionable as an Eighties synth band. In 1996 we released Walking on the Milky Way and Radio 1 wouldn’t play it. Fifty per cent of British single sales were from Woolworths, but they only sold records on radio playlists. We had no chance.”
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A decade later, in 2006, Andy and Paul reunited, initially to appear on a German TV show. Thanks to the Eighties nostalgia vibe of the last two decades, they’ve enjoyed a resurgence as a hugely popular live act, while continuing to release new material and push boundaries.“Cultural fashion has a timeline,” says Andy. “In the 80s synths were the future. In the 90s it was Oasis, and I was thinking ‘How come the Beatles are the future again?’ I’ve been around long enough now to know that all pop culture eventually eats its own history.”
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Andy and Paul were school pals, growing up on the Wirral in the 1970s, when they started carrying out weird musical experiments with old radio sets and tape recorders. It all started when Andy went to see Kraftwerk, in 1975: “I sat in seat Q36, that concert changed my life. I built a stereo from two record players and started raiding obscure German back catalogues.
OMD
“Paul’s widowed mother worked six days a week so we had the house to ourselves. We used to pump everything – war noises off the TV, experimental soundwaves – through tape recorders. Even our mates said: ‘That’s not music’. We gave ourselves this preposterous name and only intended to do one gig. I was going to Leeds to do fine art and Paul was off to London to do an electronics degree.”
But their catchy electro-pop melodies fused with intelligent lyrics caught the ear of Factory Records supremo Tony Wilson, who released Electricity. “We were just trying to blag our way onto Granada Reports. We never planned it to become pop stars,” says Andy.
Late 70s Liverpool had a fertile music scene and young bands cut their teeth at Eric’s – where OMD first played, in October 1978. “Every other person around us was in a band,” says Andy. “Open mic Tuesdays at Eric’s were full of people who went on to be in bands like Teardrop Explodes, Echo and The Bunnymen, China Crisis, Siouxsie and the Banshees. They were all in this mad punk supergroup, Big in Japan.”
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For fans like me (OMD was the first band I ever saw live), their beautifully catchy songs – about things pop acts don’t normally sing about, like oil refineries, religious martyrs, technology and the atomic bomb – take us back to wistful hours in bedrooms playing records.
“Songs that were part of your journey remain with you. They’re the pegs on which hang so many memories,” says Andy, who is so delightful I could talk to him all day. “When Paul and I got back together in 2006 we had people from a certain generation coming to see us, but also a new broader demographic: kids discovering us on a deep dive through Spotify.
“When we first started having hits we had imposter syndrome – 48 years later we’re still here, and still doing what we want to do.”
* OMD’s Summer of Hits tour is at York Museum Gardens on Thursday, July 9. Visit yorkmuseumstrust.org.uk
It has not been McIlroy’s week at Shinnecock Hills, with too many mistakes costing him any realistic chance of victory
Rory McIlroy let out an F-bomb as his frustrations boiled over at the US Open on Sunday.
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It has not been McIlroy’s week at Shinnecock Hills, with too many mistakes costing him any realistic chance of victory.
He started the final round at three over par and ten shots behind runaway leader Wyndham Clark.
The course continued to frustrate the Masters champion as he failed to birdie the opening hole despite driving the close to the edge of the green.
McIlroy then failed to get up and down at the second, dropping a shot, before his frustrations spilled over on the third.
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After finding the middle of the fairway, McIlroy had only a wedge in his hands for his approach, but pushed his second shot into a greenside bunker.
A Sky Sports microphone picked up his angry reaction.
“Oh, just go home, Rory. F****** hell!” he said.
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McIlroy opened the championship with a one-under-par 69 before taking a step backwards with a second-round 71.
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The Holywood man briefly played his way back into contention with an opening front nine of 33 on Saturday, but five bogeys on the back nine saw him tumble down the leaderboard.
McIlroy’s final opportunity this season to add to his major tally will come at next month’s Open Championship at Royal Birkdale.
Mr Craven, 85, has presented the popular BBC rural affairs show for 37 years having started in 1989.
Prior to that, he had a 17-year stint on Newsround having launched it on the BBC in 1972.
Away from TV, Mr Craven lives in a village near Banbury with his wife where the couple brought up two daughters.
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In a recent interview with Farmers’ Guardian, Mr Craven opens up about the difficulties of filming in the early days of Countryfile.
He said: “In the very early days of Countryfile, it was very difficult to get cameras onto farms and to get farmers to speak to us.
“It took a long time to win farmers over and let them open the gates of the farm and let us in.”
Farmers are now more open and willing to share their experiences, he said, but warned there remains significant questions over balancing food production with environmental goals.
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“We need to up the amount of food that is produced in this country,” he said.
“The balance between environmental concern and the need to produce more food, that is the big issue that faces the country today.”
Mr Craven was at the recent Farm Fest in Warwickshire, fronted by Chipping Norton farmer Jeremy Clarkson.
The journalist took to the stage to give a talk on farmers while at the festival.
Today, we look at strong indications the prime minister may be on the verge of resigning.
Cabinet Secretary Peter Kyle’s message this morning was that he is reflecting on the “political realities”. It’s a departure from the not ‘he’ll fight on’ message of 2026 up to now.
Henry Zeffman joins Laura and Paddy in the studio to look at the possible timetable of a resignation and the appointment of a replacement.
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You can now listen to Newscast on a smart speaker. If you want to listen, just say “Ask BBC Sounds to play Newscast”. It works on most smart speakers.
You can join our Newscast online community here: https://bbc.in/newscastdiscord
Get in touch with Newscast by emailing newscast@bbc.co.uk or send us a WhatsApp on +44 0330 123 9480.
New episodes released every day. If you’re in the UK, for more News and Current Affairs podcasts from the BBC, listen on BBC Sounds: https://bbc.in/4guXgXd
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Newscast brings you daily analysis of the latest political news stories from the BBC. The presenters were Laura Kuenssberg and Paddy O’Connell. It was made by Chris Flynn and Maddie Drury. The social producer was Gabriel Purcell-Davis. The technical producer was Mike Regaard. The assistant editor is Chris Gray. The senior news editor is Sam Bonham.
“Bradley Barcola emerging as a target for Arsenal shouldn’t be a huge surprise for us,” he said. “Of course, if we go back to the start of the Premier League era, or more accurately, the arrival of Arsene Wenger a couple of years after the Premier League started, Arsenal have this huge history with French players.
According to local media reports, under the extradition process, the UK’s formal request will be transmitted through Kenya’s Ministry of Foreign and Diaspora Affairs before being forwarded to the Office of the Attorney General and subsequently presented before the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) in court.
PARIS (AP) — France endured sizzling temperatures on Sunday, with trains, concerts and sports events canceled and authorities cracking down on drinking alcohol in public, as an exceptional heat wave unfurled across parts of Europe.
Multiple drownings were reported as people sought relief in whatever water they could find.
About a third of France is under a “red alert” for heat, and high temperatures reached 40 C (104 F) in some areas, in a country where air conditioning isn’t widespread. The forecast for Monday is even hotter.
The Eiffel Tower and other Paris venues set up misting stations to cool down crowds, among a raft of measures introduced by authorities to minimize risks. Tourists in Rome dunked in fountains. Spain’s Basque region canceled some sports and cultural events.
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Over the last four years, more than 200,000 people across Europe died from heat-related causes, and most of the fatalities were preventable, the World Health Organization’s Europe office said this month. More above-average temperatures are expected this summer, which can cause heat exhaustion and life-threatening heat stroke.
Human-caused climate change is tied to increasing extreme weather and U.N. climate agency projections say the next five years should shatter more heat records. A rapid study found that human-caused climate change was responsible for killing about 1,500 people in an unusually early European heat wave in May.
In this latest European hot spell, French media reported that four children drowned Saturday. Summer drownings are an annual problem that health authorities say worsens during hot spells.
Solstice parties draw large crowds in extreme heat
France’s annual Music Day on Sunday was of particular concern. The nationwide summer solstice celebration involves thousands of concerts in village squares, rave venues and Paris clubs, bringing communities together and increasingly drawing British and other international visitors. Some of the concerts outside Paris were canceled.
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The French government banned drinking booze in “red alert” zones, and ordered organizers of music day events to limit alcohol consumption to “preserve emergency services and allow medics to concentrate on taking care of the most vulnerable.”
Scores of French trains were canceled, and the national rail authority dispatched thousands of extra staff to deal with potential problems as the heat threatened rails and electrical cables.
Authorities are notably worried about people living in the baking streets, and elderly people in nursing homes or isolated in their homes. About 15,000 older people died in France in a 2003 heat wave that became a national reckoning.
The government mobilized emergency services and military forces for reinforced wildfire readiness, imposed tightened surveillance of water supplies to France’s many nuclear reactors, and ordered 845 schools to close Monday.
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Spain, Italy, Germany swelter as tourists seek relief
Spain kicked off the summer with large parts of the country on alert because of temperatures expected to hover around 40 C (104 F) — even in the interior of the Basque region, an area in the north of the country, which typically experiences cooler temperatures.
Authorities have suspended outdoor sports and cultural activities in the region. The heat wave is expected to scorch Spain at least through Wednesday.
In Italy, authorities expanded heat warnings — referred to locally as “red flags” — to eight cities Sunday in northern and central parts of the country. Temperatures there are mostly in the upper 30s C (high 90s to low 100s F).
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At one farm outside Milan, owners set up fans and sprinklers to keep cows cool, while visitors to Milan Fashion Week huddled under parasols and clutched fans. In Rome, tourists dunked their arms and occasionally their faces into the city’s famed fountain pools.
German meteorologists are forecasting temperatures of up to 37 C (98 F) for Monday and Tuesday, and up to 39 C (102 F) on Wednesday.
A 23-year-old man drowned Saturday in a lake near Rheinstetten in the southwestern region of Baden-Württemberg, the German news agency dpa reported. Three other people are missing after swimming in the Rhine River, a police spokesperson told dpa.
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The U.K. weather office has issued an “extreme heat” warning for much of southern England and parts of Wales from Monday until Thursday, saying temperatures could reach 38 C (100 F). The current record for a June day is 35.6 C (96 F), reached in 1976.
Thunderstorms also threatened regions in Germany and Poland.
French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu is convening a new government heat crisis meeting Sunday, and ordered government ministers to plan for better adapting France to heat waves in the future — including “via air conditioning, if necessary.”
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Derek Gatopoulos in Athens, Greece, Claudia Ciobanu in Warsaw, Poland, Jill Lawless in London, and Teresa Medrano in Madrid, contributed to this report.
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