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NewsBeat

Echo Comment on the furore surrounding Henry Nowak’s death

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Echo Comment on the furore surrounding Henry Nowak's death

The Conservatives and Labour call calmly for an inquiry, largely because they don’t have an immediate answer to the allegations of two tier policing, while Reform try to summon up “pure cold rage” partly because they are now caught in a battle to ensure they are not out-flanked. They cannot afford to stay silent on an issue for fear of being overtaken by the more extremist elements of Restore and Tommy Robinson who are egged on from afar by Elon Musk. He does not have Britain’s best interests at heart.

Were the manifest police failings due to cock-up or woke conspiracy? Britain is now so divided that it may never reach agreement on what led Henry to be ignored in his moment of supreme need. It was a dreadful police judgement.

While all the noise is about politics, it is often overlooked that Henry was killed by a 21cm knife. His is yet another young life that has been lost to the scourge of knife crime.

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One of the most pertinent debates for all communities of all colours across all the country is what can we do to eradicate this appalling, wasteful crime from our midst.

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Residents question whether Durham needs more student flats

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Plea to improve County Durham's appeal as a tourist destination

Durham University is home to around 21,500 students each year, meaning appropriate accommodation is in high demand. But as more proposals for new developments are lodged, residents have questioned why the city needs so much. 

Although large numbers of properties are being converted into shared housing, large blocks of flats – known as purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) – continue to take over.

And now, residents and politicians have warned that flats and co-living apartments are making the situation worse.

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Data suggests Durham City currently has more student accommodation than students requiring it, challenging long-standing concerns about housing shortages linked to the university. 

The situation has been a hot topic for years, but this week, it caused Durham City county councillor David Freeman to ask: “Will we keep having applications for student beds in the city for approval when there is no demand for further beds?”

Analysis published by Durham University shows there is an 800-bed surplus across the city. 

The findings come as new PBSA developments continue to be delivered across the city. More than 4,500 PBSA beds are already in operation, with thousands more either under construction or approved through the planning system. 

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Several additional schemes have been announced alongside the ongoing creation of HMOs, including new developments at Melbury Court and Hopper House. The latest city centre PBSA development includes 504 beds as part of the redevelopment of the Prince Bishops Shopping Centre

Cllr Freeman added: “When do officers think we will have enough qualitative need not to keep approving further student accommodation applications in the city? 

“We are getting to a point where in the city, we can no longer give any evidence that there is any quantitative need for student accommodation.”

It could also lead to several half-filled buildings throughout the city if the university experiences a downturn in overseas students, Durham County Council was warned. 

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Lisa Morina, a planning officer at the local authority, responded: “In the next year, the university will be producing a new plan for growth. We will have a much better idea of the quantitative and qualitative needs. 

“Each application has to be considered on its own merits. In this particular case, the developers are targeting the international student market, and we feel there is a qualitative need in this case.”

Looking ahead, Durham University predicts the demand for student accommodation in the city is expected to increase in the 2026/27 academic year as student numbers continue to grow.

Despite the anticipated increase, the university said it currently expects there will be sufficient housing available to meet student demand.

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Durham University said it continues to monitor the city’s housing development pipeline, which it described as “healthy”. 

However, it warned that changes to the private rental market, including the new Renters’ Rights Act, could create risks to student accommodation supply both locally and nationally.

Do you think there are too many student flats? Let us know in the comments

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Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor sublet three Royal Lodge cottages while paying peppercorn rent

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Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor sublet three Royal Lodge cottages while paying peppercorn rent

Eugenie’s rent was 50 per cent of the 2018 open market value from 2020 to 2021, and ranged from 55 per cent in 2022 to 63 per cent in 2025, while rent on Beatrice’s was 60 per cent of the 2020 market value from 2020-2021 and ranged from 62 per cent to 68 per cent between 2022-2025, the NAO said.

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Makerfield by-election RECAP as candidates appear on BBC Question Time

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Manchester Evening News

The drama continues in the run-up to the Makerfield by-election on June 18.

Tonight, BBC’s Question Time was broadcast live from Makerfield, where Fiona Bruce presenting a special programme from the constituency.

On the panel were: Labour mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham; Robert Kenyon of Reform UK; Michael Winstanley from the Conservatives; Jake Austin from the Lib Dems and Sarah Wakefield of the Green Party.

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Other candidates running in the Makerfield by-election are Count Binface for the Count Binface Party; Dan Clarke for the Libertarian Party; Ed Gemmell for the Climate Party; Robert Pownall, an independent; and Rebecca Shepherd for Restore Britain.

Click here for our dedicated Makerfield by-election newsletter with the latest updates and analysis

Earlier today, new data revealed that Reform UK received £9 million from donors in the first quarter of the year, the largest amount given to any political party in that period.

Elsewhere, The Prime Minister accused tech billionaire Elon Musk of trying to “whip up division” over the tragic murder of Henry Nowak. The student was 18 when he was stabbed by 23-year-old Vickrum Digwa in Southampton in December 2025.

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Sir Keir Starmer accused Musk of “interfering in our politics”, adding: “In Britain, we are reasonable, tolerant people.”

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage issued a statement calling for ‘pure, cold rage’ on Tuesday morning, despite the pleas of Henry’s father not to use his son’s death to stoke further division in society.

Join our new Makerfield by-election WhatsApp community by clicking this link for the latest news. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don’t like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you’re curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.

We’ll bring you the latest in the live blog below…

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Concerns over council plans for GAA pitches in new sport strategy

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Belfast Live

“I am also surprised that there is only one GAA pitch and four soccer pitches, it seems a bit low to me.”

Concerns over a NI council’s lack of planned GAA pitches have been raised ahead of a major sport budget development.

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Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council’s communities committee agreed to release the Draft Pitch Strategy (2026 -31) for public consultation over the summer months.

A report before the chamber has identified “support for development of one full-size GAA pitch” with in the next five to 10 years.

READ MORE: UUP councillor reacts to election stand down claims

READ MORE: Council CEO denies ‘media blackout’ of King’s visit to Co Down

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A council officer said:” I suppose we would refer to this paper as our biggie. Investment in our current stock has been considered, and we know that our grass pitches require continual maintenance along with 3G pitches.”

The council paper has also identified potential for shared facilities with schools and community centres set to benefit.

The officer added: “The strategic recommendations, make a commitment to support our local clubs to develop their facilities. Finances will be attached to the strategy once the public consultation is complete with the final version presented to members in autumn 2026.”

The pitch strategy report shows just under 130 GAA teams in the district across four codes of Gaelic games with over 3,000 players.

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As a comparison, football remains the highest played sport, with more than 6,000 participants.

Killultagh Sinn Fein councillor Gary McCleave said: “The paper shows that the priority over the next five years is for just one GAA pitch even though there are 3,000 members, how can that be?”

Castlereagh South Sinn Fein councillor Ryan Carlin added: “I am also surprised that there is only one GAA pitch and four soccer pitches, it seems a bit low to me.”

An equality impact assessment is due to be carried out on the strategy.

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A council director responded: “We have been able to identify the need for one Gaelic pitch. The feedback we have been given shows what can be achieved.

“The big piece is around community plans and shared use of schools as we need to look at maintenance of lands.”

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

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Trump says Reflecting Pool project is complete as water starts to refill the basin: ‘Looking better than ever’

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Trump says Reflecting Pool project is complete as water starts to refill the basin: ‘Looking better than ever’

The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool has completed its renovation under Donald Trump’s administration and has begun to fill with water.

The president said the work to paint the shallow basin a deep “American flag blue” was finished on Wednesday, and a court filing from his administration indicated it would be filled by Sunday.

On Thursday evening, the White House announced that the water for the reflecting pool had started flowing.

“The water is ON, the Reflecting Pool is reflecting, and D.C. is looking better than ever,” the White House wrote on X. “We are so back. THANK YOU, PRESIDENT TRUMP.”

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Trump has estimated the project’s cost at between $1.5 million and $2 million, yet records show that at least $14.8 million in contracts have been awarded for the work.

The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool has completed its renovation under Donald Trump's administration and has begun to fill with water
The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool has completed its renovation under Donald Trump’s administration and has begun to fill with water (Getty Images)

The president announced the project in April during an unrelated Oval Office appearance, saying he was inspired by complaints from a friend visiting from Germany who called the pool dark and disgusting.

The project is another way for Trump to leave his mark on the city, following the demolition of the White House East Wing to build a large ballroom, and plans to create an arch between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery.

The reflecting pool, which is more than 2,000 feet (610 meters) long, was originally built in the 1920s. It sits between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument and is one of the most iconic sites in Washington. Martin Luther King, Jr. famously gave his “I Have a Dream” speech there in 1963.

On Thursday evening, the White House announced that the water for the reflecting pool had started flowing
On Thursday evening, the White House announced that the water for the reflecting pool had started flowing (Getty Images)

The basin held about 6.5 million gallons of water — roughly as much as 10 Olympic-size swimming pools — before a 2012 renovation, according to the National Park Service.

Under that earlier renovation, the pool was reengineered with a circulation and filtration system so that instead of using the city’s drinking water, it draws river water from the nearby Tidal Basin. Washington and its surrounding states are facing drought conditions.

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Critics have said the Republican president is spending too much time and attention on his pet projects and not enough on issues that voters care about, like the cost of living, in the run-up to the November elections. Others have said he wants the reflecting pool to look more like a swimming pool.

Trump said the work to paint the shallow basin a deep ‘American flag blue’ was finished on Wednesday
Trump said the work to paint the shallow basin a deep ‘American flag blue’ was finished on Wednesday (Getty Images)

Last month, a Washington-based nonprofit called the Cultural Landscape Foundation filed a suit asking a judge to force the Trump administration to stop work on the “dark grey” Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, saying the new paint color suggested a “theme park.”

An order in the case hasn’t come yet, and on Wednesday, the Trump administration notified the court that the work was complete.

A message seeking information from the Interior Department, which oversees the National Park Service, wasn’t immediately answered.

Rachel Dobkin has contributed to this report.

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Kayden Moy jury deliberations to go into second day as teens accused of Irvine beach murder

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Daily Record

Jay Stewart, 18, and a 15-year-old boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, are accused of killing 16-year-old Kayden Moy.

A jury in the trial of two teenagers accused of murdering Kayden Moy on Irvine beach is set to continue its deliberations for a second day.

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Jay Stewart, 18, and a 15-year-old boy who cannot be named for legal reasons are accused of killing the 16-year-old on May 17 last year. Cole Turley, 18, has already pleaded guilty to Kayden’s murder.

It is alleged that – while acting with Turley – Stewart and the 15-year-old pursued Kayden, causing him to fall to the ground, and repeatedly stabbed him on the body with a knife, leaving him so badly injured that he died.

At the High Court in Glasgow, a jury began its deliberations in the case on Thursday, June 4, but ended the day without reaching a verdict. Deliberations are therefore set to resume on Friday.

Giving directions to the jury on Thursday morning, judge Lord Scott told them it was not in dispute that Turley murdered the 16-year-old or that the accused were present on Irvine beach that day.

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He told them the “crucial issue” they had to decide was whether the accused were acting in concert with Turley when he carried out the murder. Giving his closing speech at the High Court on Wednesday, Donald Findlay KC, representing Stewart, told the jury there is “not a scrap of evidence” his client played any part in Kayden’s death.

“The one thing we know beyond a shadow of doubt is that Jay Stewart did not lay a finger on Kayden Moy,” Mr Findlay said. “He was not within yards of Kayden Moy when Kayden Moy was stabbed. He had no physical involvement whatsoever in the death of Kayden Moy.”

He added: “He did not go near him, he did not offer any kind of protection or security, there is not a single, solitary scrap of evidence that Jay Stewart played any active part in the death of Kayden Moy.”

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The court previously heard Turley, Stewart and the 15-year-old were members of the Murray Boys group while Kayden and others were part of the Himshie group in East Kilbride. Mr Findlay said there had been confrontations between the groups in the past and there was nothing to suggest that day in May last year would be any different until Turley “upped the ante” and produced a knife.

He said there was a confrontation between the groups at the beach but nobody expected it to go further. Mr Findlay told the court: “There is shouting, exchanges of abuse, but at that point in time it is no more than that, and that’s as far as it should have gone till one event, and that was Cole Turley produced a knife.

“At that point, the character of this changes, but up till that point in time it is no different from any confrontation they have had previously.”

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Mr Findlay also told jurors that, according to forensic evidence, there was “not a nanogram” of evidence to show Stewart ever had the knife in his possession. Ian Duguid KC, representing the 15-year-old, later pointed jurors to evidence from a witness who had told the trial he heard the 15-year-old saying “take us a box” during the initial confrontation at the beach, as in fist-fighting.

Mr Duguid said of the 15-year-old: “He was not thinking it was going to be a stabbing. He was thinking it was going to be a fist-fight, the Murrays against the Himshies, something that was not unknown to any of them.”

The lawyer urged jurors to acquit his client if they believe Kayden’s murder could not have been anticipated by the 15-year-old, who was 14 at the time of the fatal incident. Mr Duguid continued: “He’s 15, it’s important to him, his whole life is ahead of him.”

Prosecutors earlier withdrew all charges against Stewart and the 15-year-old apart from the murder charge, which they both deny. They previously lodged special defences of incrimination. The trial continues before Judge Lord Scott.

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Psychologist to open Durham Wellness Space in Coxhoe

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Psychologist to open Durham Wellness Space in Coxhoe

Dr Hannah Barraclough, 38, from Durham, hopes to open Durham Wellness Space on Front Street East in Coxhoe by the end of June or July after spending 18 months transforming a former community building.

The clinical psychologist, who spent several years working in the NHS before establishing her private practice five years ago, said years of searching for suitable therapy rooms convinced her to create her own.

Dr Hannah Barraclough, 38, from Durham, is set to open Durham Wellness Space on Front Street East in Coxhoe (Image: PROVIDED)

Dr Barraclough said: “I’ve rented lots of different rooms all over the place and none of them have ever been quite right.

“Either they were cold or not welcoming and some didn’t have that safe, nice feeling that you would want with a therapy room.

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“So when I decided to leave my last therapy room because it wasn’t really working anymore, I decided that I wanted to create that space for people, the space that I couldn’t find.”

The result is Durham Wellness Space, a purpose-built centre designed to bring together therapists, holistic practitioners and wellbeing professionals in what Dr Barraclough describes as a wellness community.

She added: “We developed the wellness space as a kind of community building to bring all different wellness professionals together in, like, a wellness community, in an environment that’s purpose-built.

“We want to build that community where we can work together, maybe cross-refer and collaborate, as running your own business sometimes can be isolating.”

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Durham Wellness Space is set to open on Front Street East in Coxhoe in the former police station (Image: PROVIDED)

The centre will be run by self-employed practitioners who will rent rooms while working alongside one another and collaborating where appropriate.

Dr Barraclough said creating a welcoming environment was central to the project after years of working from rooms that lacked warmth and comfort.

Her own therapy room has been designed to resemble a living room rather than a traditional healthcare setting, adding: “Hopefully, the second you walk in the building, I want it to be a whole kind of experience.”

The building, which has previously been used as a police station and a dental surgery, was acquired around a year and a half ago.

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Durham Wellness Space is set to open on Front Street East in Coxhoe in the former police station (Image: PROVIDED)

Dr Barraclough and her husband, Andrew Barraclough, who runs AB Home Improvements, stripped the property back to brick before carrying out a full renovation, including rewiring, replastering, a new heating system, new carpets, replacement windows and doors, security systems and external rendering.

The work was completed while the couple continued working full-time jobs and raising their two children.

Dr Barraclough added: “We’ve had the building quite a long time. It’s just obviously we’ve been juggling family life, working to fund the building and then doing it around working. It’s been quite a year and a half.”

The space will also become the home of Clear Mind Collective CIC, a non-profit organisation launched by Dr Barraclough in July 2024 to provide affordable and accessible mental health support.

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She hopes to use the organisation to expand free and low-cost therapy services and provide educational support and consultancy for local businesses.

She said: “I am hoping to run more community events through the non-profit, for the community, with free or low-cost therapy so that hopefully we can provide lots of accessible treatment, as we understand that the NHS waiting lists are long, so it is about breaking down that barrier, by being able to get funding to provide either low-cost or free therapy for people.

“The other strand of it is education, consultancy, and mental health support for business owners. So, specifically, targeting other business owners as well.”

A soft launch is planned once the final stages of the project are completed, with the centre expected to open later this summer.

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Pentagon drops 180 religions from its recognized faiths list

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Pentagon drops 180 religions from its recognized faiths list

The Pentagon is reportedly dropping roughly 180 faiths and belief systems from its officially recognized list.

The Defense Department will only recognize 31 such systems going forward, down from about 211, according to a May memo obtained by Military.com.

“The new list will provide chaplains with clear, readily available information that will better enable them to anticipate the religious support needs of service members and to provide religious support activities that align with service members’ personal faith and practices,” reads the memo, which was reportedly signed by Anthony Tata, Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness.

The Independent has contacted the Pentagon for comment.

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A former U.S. Army chaplain sharply criticized the changes.

The Pentagon has reportedly drastically cut the number of religious faiths and worldviews it recognizes
The Pentagon has reportedly drastically cut the number of religious faiths and worldviews it recognizes (AFP/Getty)

“When I raised my hand to become an Army chaplain, I swore that I would support and defend the Constitution,” the veteran told Military.com. “The First Amendment is the free exercise of religion for everybody. That’s what I was buying into.”

“That’s a tragedy and travesty, absolutely,” they added of the changes. “As far as I’m concerned, that’s a violation of the United States Constitution.”

The military will continue to recognize Agnostics, Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, Jews, and Sikhs, and followers of a variety of Christian denominations, among others, according to the outlet. It will reportedly no longer recognize view systems including those of Atheists, Asatru, Deists, Druids, Eckankar, Heathens, Humanists, Magick, New Age churches, Pagan, Rosicrucianism, Shaman, Spiritualists, Troth, Unitarian Universalists and Wiccans.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who has pushed to incorporate public displays of Christian prayer into various military settings, signaled the changes earlier this year.

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“The previous system had ballooned to well over 200 faith codes. … It was impractical and unusable, and many codes were never used at all,” Hegseth said in March, adding that a significant majority of service members use only six of the religious codes.

Hegseth has frequently invoke his Christian faith as part of his official duties, leading prayer services and describing the war with Iran in religious terms
Hegseth has frequently invoke his Christian faith as part of his official duties, leading prayer services and describing the war with Iran in religious terms (AFP/Getty)

In his March announcement, Hegseth said that the rank insignia military chaplains wear on their work uniforms will be replaced by their religious insignia.

The secretary has led Christian prayer services at the Pentagon and has quoted Bible verses, real and fictional, while speaking about the war against predominantly Muslim Iran.

The Pentagon, meanwhile, has displayed Bible verses alongside military footage in promotional videos.

Critics have argued Hegseth’s religiosity defies the military tradition of being secular and nonpartisan.

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“The U.S. voluntarily going to war against a Muslim country with the military under the leadership of Pete Hegseth is exactly the kind of scenario that people like me were warning about before the election and throughout his appointment process,” religion scholar Matthew D. Taylor told The Associated Press.

Before serving in the Trump administration, Hegseth defended the medieval Crusades. He has multiple Christian tattoos using Crusader imagery, body art that caused a minor scandal during Hegseth’s confirmation process.

During his time in the military, a fellow service member reportedly flagged Hegseth as a possible “insider threat” due to the tattoos, given that white supremacist groups have used similar imagery.

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Inquest opens into death of Trimdon mother Eloise Whittleton

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Inquest opens into death of Trimdon mother Eloise Whittleton

The court heard Eloise Whittleton, 29, from Trimdon Station, was found unresponsive at her Beech Grove home on March 15. She was taken to North Tees General Hospital for treatment but died on March 18.

An inquest looking into the circumstances surrounding her death was opened at Crook Coroner’s Court.

The inquest heard a post-mortem examination was carried out by Dr Peter Nigel Cooper at Newcastle Freeman Hospital Mortuary on April 1.

Anne Marie said Eloise “absolutely loved her little girl” (Image: FAMILY)

The medical cause of death was given as hypoxic ischaemic brain Injury (occurs when the brain is deprived of adequate oxygen and blood flow), cardiac arrest and cocaine toxicity.

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The inquest heard Ms Whittleton was born in Stockton before proceedings were adjourned.

Eloise pictured with her daughter Annie-Rae (Image: FAMILY)

Folowing Eloise’s death tributes poured in with hundreds of mourners attending her funeral in April.

Around 300 people gathered to pay their respects at St Mary Magdalene’s Church before she was laid to rest.

Her mum described her as the “life and soul of the party” (Image: FAMILY)

The mother-of-one left behind her daughter Annie-Rae, as well as her parents, Anne Marie and Steven, and brothers Steven and Jonathon.

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Speaking after her daughter’s death, Anne Marie described Eloise as “very bubbly” and said she was “the life and soul of any party”.

Eloise’s funeral flowers (Image: FAMILY)

She said: “She was very bubbly; she was the life and soul of any party. She would get everybody up dancing, she loved music and was always singing.

“She would dance to anything. She used to go to the punk bands with us, she went to raves, anything. She has a five-year-old daughter and would always sing to her.”

Describing her daughter’s devotion to Annie-Rae, she added: “She absolutely loved her little girl. She would take her swimming, take her the beach. She would do anything for Annie-Rae.”

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Eloise Whittleton died aged 29 on Wednesday, March 18 (Image: FAMILY)

Anne Marie said Eloise “absolutely loved her little girl” (Image: FAMILY)

Anne Marie also said her daughter was known for her kindness and willingness to help others.

She said: “She was just so kind-hearted; she would help anybody out. She was one of those people who could get on with anyone, young and old.”

An inquest into Ms Whittleton’s death will continue at a later date.

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On Question Time the ‘plucky plumber’ feels the glare of the spotlight as Burnham shows his hand

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Manchester Evening News

To quote the great tactician and thinker Mike Tyson: “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the face.”

In political terms, BBC Question Time’s Makerfield by-election special was the equivalent of a prize fight. In the turquoise corner stood Robert “Plucky Plumber” Kenyon, Reform UK’s candidate and local councillor. In the red corner stood Andy “King of the North” Burnham, Mayor of Greater Manchester, former cabinet minister and, if the political gossip is to be believed, a man with one eye on a considerably larger prize than a parliamentary seat in Makerfield.

If that makes this sound like an even contest, it is worth considering the tale of the tape.

Click here for our dedicated Makerfield by-election newsletter with exclusive interviews and analysis

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Burnham has spent decades in politics. He has sat around Cabinet tables, fought leadership contests, survived Westminster and appeared on enough Question Time panels to know exactly where the audience is likely to turn. Kenyon, by contrast, is a councillor and a plumber.

Whether unblocking a toilet on a wet Monday morning is preferable to being confronted by a BBC audience armed with printouts of your social media history is a matter only he can answer.

The challenge facing Kenyon was obvious before the programme even began. Earlier in the day he had appeared on BBC Radio Manchester with Mike Sweeney, where he described Burnham as a political titan and portrayed the contest as something of a free hit. Expectations were low. If he performed well, he would exceed them. If he struggled, he was up against one of Labour’s most recognisable figures.

Yet there was another issue hanging over him. A succession of difficult interviews during the campaign had raised questions about both his policy knowledge and a trail of controversial comments that stubbornly refused to disappear. Question Time offered an opportunity to reset the conversation.

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It did not quite work out that way.

The first question concerned trust in politics. Burnham answered with a theme he has spent years developing. Westminster, he argued, is too focused on point-scoring and not enough on problem-solving. It is “party first rather than place first”. The system does not properly serve places like Greater Manchester. What is needed is a more collaborative style of politics and a fundamental change in how power is distributed.

Whether or not one agrees with the diagnosis, it is a case Burnham can make almost from memory.

Kenyon’s answer was more straightforward.

“Get normal people into politics,” he said. People who care about where they live and do not see politics as a stepping stone.

It is a line that neatly captures Reform’s broader argument. The country has too many professional politicians and not enough ordinary people willing to speak plainly.

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The irony was that, as the evening progressed, Kenyon often appeared the most scripted person on the panel.

There were moments where he seemed less like a man expressing his own views than somebody trying very hard to remember the precise wording approved by a communications team. The anti-politician occasionally looked more cautious and rehearsed than the politicians.

The most uncomfortable exchanges centred on his past comments about women.

Audience members returned repeatedly to the issue. One declared: “I’d rather have a career politician than a plumber who is a sexist.”

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Kenyon insisted he would not accept the label. He acknowledged making mistakes. He said comments made 15 years ago did not reflect who he is today. He spoke about being raised by his mother, grandmother and older sister.

“I’ve got nothing but respect for women,” he said. It didn’t quite convince – it sounded almost like ‘how can I hate women, my mum is one’?

Yet the strangest moment came when he was challenged over comments in which he had reportedly described himself as a sexist. His reply was a single word. “Allegedly.” The audience laughed.

It was one of those exchanges that lasts only a few seconds but lingers far longer. The problem for Kenyon was not that anyone thought he was seriously denying the charge. It was that a room which was clearly waiting for contrition got a punchline instead.

Sarah Wakefield, the Green Party candidate, pressed the issue further. Having spoken to Carol Vorderman, she said Vorderman remained upset by the comments and challenged Kenyon to look directly into the camera and apologise. He did not.

Instead, he returned to the same defence he had used throughout the evening. The comments were old. They had been taken out of context. He had made mistakes. He would not say those things today.

It was a perfectly coherent defence. It just was not the answer some audience members wanted.

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If Kenyon spent much of the evening on the defensive, Burnham’s challenge was always likely to come later.

The death of Henry Nowak and the subsequent controversy around policing has become one of the most emotionally charged political issues of recent weeks. There had been widespread anticipation about how Burnham would respond.

The discussion produced some of the programme’s most serious moments.

Conservative candidate Michael Winstanley described the footage as heartbreaking and appalling. Kenyon spoke of the anger many people felt and argued there was a perception of two-tier policing.

Burnham’s response was careful. He rejected the idea that Greater Manchester Police operated such a system, praised Chief Constable Sir Stephen Watson’s leadership and emphasised the importance of maintaining public confidence across all communities.

At the same time, he accepted that national guidance required scrutiny.

“I think it’s right that the Government are reviewing this guidance,” he said. “I don’t think this guidance has got it right.”

It was a nuanced position. Acknowledging public concern while avoiding the broader claims made by Reform. The larger clash came over political rhetoric.

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Burnham criticised Nigel Farage’s use of the word “rage” in relation to the case and warned politicians about the consequences of their language.

“I’m mayor of Greater Manchester,” he said. “I know my words have consequences.”

He spoke about the danger of “poison dripping into our streets” and argued politicians should be working to find common ground rather than deepening divisions.

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Kenyon, for his part, unequivocally condemned the disorder that followed.

“Violence is not the answer,” he said.

Elsewhere the discussion ranged across housing, immigration and economic growth.

One audience member posed a question that neatly captured the tensions running through modern politics. She announced she intended to vote for Burnham before immediately declaring that she could not stand Keir Starmer.

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Burnham used the opportunity to make the case for his own political project. Greater Manchester, he argued, has become the country’s fastest-growing city region under devolution. The answer to Britain’s problems is not less local power but more.

Then came the moment everybody had been waiting for.

Would he challenge for the Labour leadership?

Burnham stopped just short of a formal declaration while somehow managing to leave little doubt about his intentions.

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“I think Wes Streeting seems to have launched a leadership contest,” he said. “So if that is running, I would seek to join it.”

It was not quite a campaign launch.

For a by-election candidate supposedly focused on winning a single parliamentary seat, it was a striking intervention. Throughout the evening Burnham repeatedly framed Makerfield as part of a bigger argument about changing Labour and changing politics. This was the clearest indication yet that he sees the two as connected.

By the end of the programme, the shape of the evening had become clear. Burnham looked exactly what he is: an experienced politician entirely comfortable in a live television debate.

Kenyon looked like a candidate still adjusting to the scrutiny that comes with national attention. He survived the evening without a catastrophic mistake and occasionally landed points of his own, particularly when discussing immigration and housing. But he never quite managed to escape the controversies that had followed him into the studio.

Perhaps the oddest thing about the night was that Reform’s candidate, the man running against professional politicians, often looked more constrained by politics than anyone else on the panel.

Question Time is a difficult format because audiences can sense the difference between conviction and choreography. Burnham understood that instinctively. Kenyon sometimes appeared caught between speaking naturally and sticking to the script.

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And in politics, as Mike Tyson might have put it, that is often what happens after the first punch lands.

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