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How the trend for turning front gardens into driveways is adding to night-time heat

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How the trend for turning front gardens into driveways is adding to night-time heat

Warm sticky nights are becoming more and more common in the UK.

Climate change is raising temperatures, but one factor that adds to that is often ignored. Walk down a city street and you see what would have been front gardens a decade or so ago have now been tarmacked over and turned into driveways.

Individually these changes might seem small, but as more and more gardens disappear this increase in hard driveways can alter the way neighbourhoods heat up during the day and cool down at night. It’s an issue that is suddenly on more people’s minds this summer as they struggle to sleep.

According to a UK’s Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) report in 2025, 42% of domestic garden space is now paved over, including 55% of front garden space.

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In 2005, only about 8% of UK front gardens were fully paved. By 2015, that figure had tripled to roughly 24%.

Estimates from the RHS suggest there are 20.6 million domestic gardens (front and back) in the UK, covering around 502,757 hectares. The UK’s domestic gardens together cover an area around three times larger than all national nature reserves combined, giving them enormous potential to support wildlife.

Replacing vegetation with hard surfaces also shrinks habitat for plants and wildlife while increasing surface runoff and the risk of flooding.

The desire for more off-street parking may have contributed to this trend. The shift to electric vehicles could have created another incentive to pave front gardens, as goverment grants helped households finance home-charging points.

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Graphic plotting domestic gardens across Great Britain and showing a heat map (red being the hottest)
RHS, Author provided (no reuse)

How paving stokes heat

Impervious surfaces including asphalt (which many driveways are made of) absorbs heat, raising ground and air temperatures. They both absorb up to 95% of incoming solar radiation during the day, reaching surface temperatures of 50-55°C, compared to 27-32°C for grass or tree-covered areas.

During the day, this heat is stored and slowly released after sunset. This is known as the urban heat island effect. The result is warmer night-time air temperatures, particularly during heatwaves. Unlike vegetation, these hard materials have little capacity to cool themselves through evaporation, and are making cities hotter.

This heat island effect can raise cities’ temperatures by 1-3°C compared to surrounding countryside. That’s why it always feels hotter in the city on summer nights.

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À lire aussi :
Heatwaves: how to close the UK’s cooling divide


And the result can also cause health problems. The 2018 summer heatwave saw an estimated 399 (of 785) heat-related deaths in the Greater London area attributable to this night-time effect.

Paved front gardens eliminate evaporative cooling (the process by which plants release water vapour), which lowers air temperatures. Plants and trees provide cooling through shading and evapotranspiration (defined as the combined loss of water to the atmosphere through two processes: evaporation and transpiration). In urban environments, green spaces release moisture into the air, which humidifies the atmosphere and significantly reduces air temperature, a mechanism entirely absent in paved areas.

What needs to change?

Changing front driveways back to grass can reduce daytime surface temperatures by 1.5-2.0°C and nighttime temperatures by 0.3-0.5°C. Adding trees doubles the benefit: daytime cooling of 2.0-3.0°C and nighttime reductions of 0.5-1.0°C. Therefore, increasing urban greenery by 10% – particularly planting trees – can lower average air temperatures by around 0.5°C.

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Front gardens with plants rather than driveways can also reduce flood risk by absorbing rain, filter air pollutants, support biodiversity and improve mental wellbeing. The RHS estimates that restoring plant cover in one million front gardens could save millions of litres of stormwater run-off annually.

But there are ways to have a driveway that doesn’t create so much heat. London’s De-pave Your Garden campaign offers guidance on replacing concrete with permeable paving, gravel or planting strips, an approach that has since been promoted by London boroughs including Lambeth and Ealing.

Leeds City Council’s front garden design guide encourages householders to retain at least 30% green space.

Other things could help change people’s attitudes to front gardens and their value. Financial incentives, such as council tax rebates for depaving or grants for rain gardens, could accelerate change.

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In the future, public policy must recognise private gardens as green infrastructure, not merely private amenities. Updating planning permission rules to encourage a mix of plants and gravel, for instance, would help.

The United Nations identifies urban greenery as a key way to reduce heat in cities. The benefits extend beyond gardens: green roofs and balcony gardens can lower indoor temperatures by up to 11°C.

No single garden will transform a city’s climate, but when thousands of gardens are protected and restored across neighbourhoods, the combined cooling effect would become significant.

As climate projections show more frequent, longer and hotter summers, every square metre of restored vegetation matters. Domestic gardens are frontline defences against intensifying heatwaves.

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By not opting for a tarmacked driveway or replanting the existing one, households can help cool their streets, protect vulnerable neighbours and reclaim a piece of Britain’s vanishing green heritage.

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Love Island’s Ellie Chadwick quits the villa as her fellow islanders choose to dump Finley Maddock in brutal decision as four stars leave the show

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Love Island's Ellie Chadwick quits the villa as her fellow islanders choose to dump Finley Maddock in brutal decision as four stars leave the show

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Love Island’s Ellie Chadwick has quit the villa after her fellow islanders chose to dump Finley Maddock.

It was revealed on Wednesday that the Scottish villa favourite had reportedly left the ITV dating show just days before the final.

And during Thursday night’s episode her final moments were aired as her fellow islanders chose to send home her partner Finley. 

After the public vote, it was Elicia, Martha and Mica who were revealed as the three least favourite girls. And Finley, Jordan and Samraj who were the least favourite boys. 

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In a dramatic episode, Elicia and Jordan were revealed as the least popular and were automatically dumped from the villa. 

It was then the difficult job of the remaining islanders to vote to decide which two islanders to send home out of the remaining four. 

Love Island’s Ellie Chadwick’s has quit the villa after her fellow islanders chose to dump Finley Maddock in a brutal decision during Thursday’s episode 

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Announcing her decision to leave, Finley asked her: ‘Are you sure? I feel like I’ve put you in this situation. I feel I’ve just ruined your experience’

And after tense back and forth, the group decided to send home Martha and Finley.

Despite a turbulent past week in her relationship with Finley, Ellie began to cry as she told the islanders: ‘I know that he is my person.’ 

But as the vote was revealed the tears streamed down her face as she said: ‘I’m going guys I am going I can’t do it.’ 

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Announcing her decision to leave, Finley asked her: ‘Are you sure? I feel like I’ve put you in this situation. I feel I’ve just ruined your experience.’ 

Ellie replied: ‘Who’s going to come walk through the doors and I’m going to have a connection like I did with you in two weeks? No one. I fought our corner, and it was a vote. There’s not much else I can do from that.’

The pair then had a tearful goodbye with their fellow islanders before packing their suitcases and heading on their way.

While Ellie and Finley survived the test of Casa Amor and their relationship appeared to be going from strength to strength, last week they faced a major bump in the road when Finley had his head turned by bombshell Elicia Bailey.

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Ellie threatened to leave the villa several times during the heartache as Elicia recoupled with her man before they went on a flirty date which saw them share a kiss.  

Yet Tuesday night’s episode saw the pair’s on/off romance back on track after Finley cut off his flirtation with Elicia and Ellie chose him in the recoupling.

But as the vote was revealed the tears streamed down her face as she said: 'I'm going guys I am going I can't do it'

But as the vote was revealed the tears streamed down her face as she said: ‘I’m going guys I am going I can’t do it’

Her departure comes after a week of tears for the estate agent after her partner Fin had his head turned by bombshell Elicia Bailey (pictured)

Her departure comes after a week of tears for the estate agent after her partner Fin had his head turned by bombshell Elicia Bailey (pictured)

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Tuesday night's episode saw the pair's on/off romance back on track after Finley cut off his flirtation with Elicia and Ellie chose him in the recoupling

Tuesday night’s episode saw the pair’s on/off romance back on track after Finley cut off his flirtation with Elicia and Ellie chose him in the recoupling

Ellie is the third person to leave the show this year not via a dumping.

Days into the series George Knight left the villa for ‘personal reasons’. George has insisted he quit the villa after learning that a member of his family had a health concern, but sources have since shared the real reason behind his departure.

It’s claimed that while George’s story about his family is true, he has used it to hide the fact that he was axed after receiving a formal warning for using ‘unacceptable language’ in the villa.

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George then learned of his family news at the same time, but there is no suggestion that ITV bosses attempted to cover up his behaviour.

Casa Amor bombshell Gabriel Garland was axed from the show after just a day when revelations about his past came to light, after it was not picked up in official background checks.

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Tom Hiddleston hopes he ‘honoured’ the people of Pompeii in documentary

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Tom Hiddleston hopes he ‘honoured’ the people of Pompeii in documentary

He said: “They were ordinary people, like us, they were families, and fishermen, and business owners, and soldiers, and friends, and lovers, and mothers and sons, they weren’t people who expected their lives to be remembered, so I hope I’ve honoured their humanity and their courage.”

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Jesy Nelson’s twin daughters suffer fresh health setback after SMA campaign

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Jesy Nelson's twin daughters suffer fresh health setback after SMA campaign
Former Little Mix singer Jesy Nelson has provided an update on her daughters (Picture: Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire)

Jesy Nelson has revealed how her twin daughters have suffered a fresh health setback after her campaign to screen newborn babies for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) secured a major breakthrough.

The former Little Mix star said she ‘can’t stop crying’ after learning all babies born in England will now be tested for the rare genetic condition at birth.

However, Jesy said that the historic change is ‘bittersweet’ as her daughters, Ocean Jade and Story Monroe, are ‘not great’.

The 25-year-old said her twins’ future is uncertain as medics are still assessing how much of their muscles died off before they were diagnosed late and then treated.

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Both Ocean and Story were diagnosed with Spinal Muscular Atrophy Type 1, the most severe form of the muscle-wasting disease, after leaving hospital.

However, Jesy said that the diagnosis came too late after irreversible nerve damage and it is likely that they will never walk again.

Jesy Nelson posing with baby in cafe
Jesy previously called herself ‘the luckiest girl in the world’ to be mum to her daughters, Ocean Jade and Story Monroe (Picture: @jesynelson/Instagram)
Jesy Nelson
The singer’s twin daughters were diagnosed with Spinal Muscular Atrophy Type 1 (Picture: Instagram/jesynelson)

Speaking to The Sun, Jesy discussed Ocean and Story’s most recent three-month review at St Ormond Street’s Children’s Hospital where doctors warned that the girls were not responding to the treatment how they had hoped.

‘Unfortunately, some of the numbers have gone down,’ she said.

‘We had a long discussion and there’s a possibility they may have to go back on treatment, which is just heartbreaking.

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‘I constantly battle between manifesting they’re going to defy the odds and trying to come to accept that that may not happen.

‘It’s a really weird position to be in because you you think ‘well, if that doesn’t happen, am I just going to feel heartbroken for the rest of my life?’

‘Then you worry, if I accept it, am I also manifesting that?’

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In her new Prime Video show, Jesy Nelson: Life Changing, the singer also broke down in tears over the guilt she carries and worries her children will blame her when they’re older.

She told the publication: ‘I know it’s not my fault, but when I watch back videos of when I brought them home and they were kicking their legs, I realise now that over the course of a month, they just stopped.

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‘That’s the part where the guilt kicks in because I don’t understand how I didn’t see that. Why didn’t I spot that?’

This comes after Jesy shared heartbreaking footage of the moment she was told about her twins’ devastating diagnosis.

The 35-year-old posted footage from her Amazon Prime Video series: ‘Jesy Nelson: Life Changing’, which she ‘urges’ everyone to watch.

In the clip, Jesy can be seen rocking one of her babies from side to side while she and her former partner, Zion Foster, receive news that her twins’ ‘genetic test came back positive’ for the life-altering condition.

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Burnham ‘casts a shadow over the economy’ as Reeves leaves No11 with dismal growth and a fragile future

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Latest sluggish growth figures come days before Andy Burnham takes office - and don't match what Rachel Reeves (pictured on Tuesday) has been claiming...

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Andy Burnham will inherit a ‘fragile’ economy gripped by stagflation fears, experts warned on Thursday after the latest dismal growth figures.

Days before Mr Burnham enters Downing Street, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said gross domestic product (GDP) grew by just 0.1 per cent in May, after shrinking by 0.1 per cent in April.

It came as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) delivered a stark warning to the incoming Prime Minister not to put up public spending and instead get the public finances under control.

Official figures suggest the economy enjoyed a strong start to the year but has stuttered after Donald Trump’s Iran war disrupted supply chains and pushed up costs.

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Some businesses also point to the ongoing impact of Labour’s tax hikes, minimum wage increases and workers’ rights policies in holding back growth.

And experts point to the risk that Britain suffers a bout of ‘stagflation’ – the toxic combination of stagnating growth and rising inflation.

Latest sluggish growth figures come days before Andy Burnham takes office – and don’t match what Rachel Reeves (pictured on Tuesday) has been claiming… 

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It comes in stark contrast to Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s claim in a speech to the City this week to have ‘beaten the odds’ to deliver a ‘strong’ economy.

Thursday’s GDP figures showed that while the huge services sector – ranging from bars and hotels to accountancy and law firms – grew by 0.3 per cent in May, other parts of the economy struggled. Manufacturing grew by just 0.1 per cent and the construction sector shrank by 0.8 per cent.

Stuart Morrison, research manager at the British Chambers of Commerce said: ‘The latest ONS data shows a fragile economy weighed down by geopolitical tensions and domestic cost pressures.’

And Suren Thiru, chief economist at the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, said: ‘This dishearteningly weak rebound is unlikely to ease anxiety over the UK’s economic health.’

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Mr Thiru said the ‘underwhelming’ figure highlighted that the UK remained vulnerable given the resumption of hostilities in the Middle East, pushing oil prices higher again.

Such an outcome ‘would further damage an already frail economy, strengthening stagflation risks’. he added – eroding the new PM’s ‘headroom’ for changing tax or spending plans.

‘The imminent change in Prime Minister risks casting a shadow over the UK economy, with heightened uncertainty over future tax policy likely to make consumers and businesses more reluctant to spend and invest,’ Mr Thiru said.

It came as the IMF’s latest report on the UK also stressed that the parlous state of the public finances could tie the new PM’s hands.

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The IMF said that, amid ballooning debt and pressure from bond investors, Mr Burnham’s priority must be to stick to plans to bring down borrowing.

And in advice unlikely to find favour with Left-wing Labour MPs, it said the government must be ‘very selective’ when responding to new demands for spending.

The IMF acknowledged the pressures posed by the UK’s ageing population and rising defence spending commitments but warned against raising taxes even further to meet them.

‘With the tax-to-GDP ratio already set to reach historic levels by UK standards, meeting these pressures through tax measures alone would risk amplifying distortions and undermining growth prospects,’ it said.

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The advice from the IMF came a day after Mr Burnham refused to rule out imposing a wealth tax when he comes to power, saying he ‘might be having to ask for a little more’.

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Reporter Challenges Leavitt With One Key Election Fact

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Reporter Challenges Leavitt With One Key Election Fact

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WATCH: Leavitt Quizzed On Teleprompter Scandal

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WATCH: Leavitt Quizzed On Teleprompter Scandal

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Harry Kane breaks his silence after England exit as Three Lions captain bemoans ‘missing final piece of the jigsaw’ and urges team to ‘go again’

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England captain Harry Kane led his team with distinction at the World Cup, scoring six goals

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England captain Harry Kane has taken to social media to share his disappointment at his team’s World Cup exit at the hands of Argentina, admitting the 2-1 defeat in Atlanta was ‘hard to take’. 

Bayern Munich striker Kane led England with distinction, scoring six goals at the tournament, but could do little to avert the late defeat against Lionel Messi‘s team on Wednesday.   

‘No words are big enough right now to overcome this empty feeling in the stomach,’ he says. ‘We were close, really close to another final but it wasn’t enough. 

‘We’ve given everything over these last 7 weeks and to fall short is hard to take! I know the expectations are high and rightly so, we’ve been knocking on the door for 8 years now but again are missing that final piece of the jigsaw! 

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‘That’s where we have to go away, process it and find a way to get better. I’m so proud of the boys and what we have shown throughout this tournament – some tough games and tough environments that we have overcome. 

‘Some memories that will stay with us players and I’m sure you fans for a long long time! Going for glory doesn’t always mean you will get it. You have to fight for it, get knocked down, pick yourself up and go again and that’s what we will do, there’s no other way but to keep believing and keeping pushing. 

‘Thank you to every single fan that travelled and showed their support in the stadiums. Thank you to every fan back home for believing in us. Thank you to the boys and staff for everything you have given. As always Win or lose, we learn and go again!’ 

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England captain Harry Kane led his team with distinction at the World Cup, scoring six goals

Kane was seen in am embrace with Messi at the finish, a rare example of sportsmanship by the poorly-behaved South Americans who did little to enhance their reputation on an ill-tempered night. 

‘I’m gutted,’ Kane said in his post-match interview. ‘I’m gutted for the boys, I’m gutted for everyone, the team, the staff, the fans. We played a good game for the large majority of it. 

‘Once we went 1-0 up we seemed to just try and hold on which at this level is just not enough, so I’m gutted.

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‘We worked so hard to be here. The lads have given every last bit of running, sweat, blood, tears, whatever it is, so to fall short like today is just gutting.’

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‘I was a puppet’: How I found myself in the middle of the Watergate scandal and what really worries me about Washington now

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Donald Segretti is surrounded by newsmen outside the U.S. District court in Washington, October 2, 1973, after pleading guilty to three charges of violating federal election laws during the 1972 Democratic presidential primary

Donald Segretti was not long back from Vietnam, after being drafted, when he got a call from an old friend from the University of Southern California asking if he wanted to work for the President of the United States.

It sounded like a great opportunity but, unfortunately, it led to him becoming a member of the Committee for the Re-Election of the President (CREEP) and his name ending up synonymous with Watergate.

Half a century on, aged 84, Segretti is as engaging as he was when 60 Minutes called him ‘the most unlikely of political saboteurs.’

Since then, he has remained studiously out of the spotlight, and is one of the few remaining players from the infamous scandal.

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He has rebuilt his life, successfully, still practices as a bankruptcy lawyer in California, and is happy that he has led a productive life after being caught up in the maelstrom that was Watergate.

In a rare interview with the Daily Mail, Segretti described how he was ‘thrown to the wolves’ amid the drama that engulfed the Nixon administration.

Donald Segretti is surrounded by newsmen outside the U.S. District court in Washington, October 2, 1973, after pleading guilty to three charges of violating federal election laws during the 1972 Democratic presidential primary

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On October 10, 1972 he was first named as an ‘undercover Nixon operative’ paid by the White House and CREEP to carry out dirty tricks against Democratic presidential candidates.

The youthful 5ft 4ins lawyer then found himself at the center of a media feeding frenzy, was tracked to his apartment in Marina Del Rey, Los Angeles by the Washington Post, testified to the Senate Watergate hearings, and served four months in prison.

The whirlwind began after he spent a year as a commissioned officer in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps, conducting court martials in Vietnam.

He had previously been at USC where his acquaintances included members of the Trojans for Representative Government, who carried out college election dirty tricks, and went on to become Nixon White House staffers, where they were known as the ‘USC mafia.’ Segretti also had a brief spell at Cambridge University in the UK.

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‘I ended up with that crowd in Washington DC. That was a nightmare. Those were not good years.’ he told the Daily Mail. ‘I was very young, comparatively, I was lured into working for the group in the White House. I was told something that turned out to be very different, and I got really maimed and beat up by much of the media at that time.

‘I mean, I didn’t call them up; they called me up. I was, you know, I ended up in the middle of something that I had no idea, or the background, or what the hell who these people were.

Richard Nixon announces his resignation from the White House on August 9, 1974

Richard Nixon announces his resignation from the White House on August 9, 1974

The scandal erupted after a burglary of the DNC headquarters at the Watergate building, in which Segretti had no involvement

The scandal erupted after a burglary of the DNC headquarters at the Watergate building, in which Segretti had no involvement

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‘I figured out what I was in the middle of, and I broke with them. The administration at that time really wasn’t happy with me and sort of just cut me off, so I was on my own. So I was sort of thrown to the wolves.’

‘Over time, through frankly grit, hard work, persistence, I got through it, and it came out fine. Over the years, I built a nice life for myself, a successful law practice. I’m still practicing a little bit, but it was an awful time for me.’

Segretti had nothing to do with the infamous burglary of the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate hotel in Washington DC.

Instead, he targeted Democratic presidential candidates in the 1972 primaries using agents who knew him as ‘Don Simmons.’

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The dirty tricks were aimed particularly at derailing Democratic frontrunner Ed Muskie, who was leading Nixon in polls as the President sought reelection.

In the most famous incident, using stolen Muskie campaign stationery, letters were sent to voters saying that fellow Democratic candidate Hubert Humphrey had previously been arrested for drunk driving and that another Muskie rival, Senator Henry ‘Scoop’ Jackson, had fathered a child with a 17-year-old girl.

The stories were false and designed to appear like a dirty tricks campaign by Muskie, therefore damaging his standing.

Other Segretti tactics were less serious, including booking unwanted guests and entertainers for Muskie events. He stood across the road and watched them turn up.

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In a famous scene from the Hollywood movie ‘All the President’s Men,’ in which Segretti is played by Robert Walden, the Washington Post journalist Carl Bernstein, played by Dustin Hoffman, turns up at his door in Marina Del Rey.

The Segretti character calls his dirty tricks ‘Nickel-and-dime stuff. Stuff with a little “wit” attached to it.’

He also introduces the term ‘ratf**king,’ which had been coined at USC to refer to political pranks.

Segretti told the Daily Mail he never watched the movie in full because his memories of that time were too painful.

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‘The whole thing was so painful,’ he said. ‘I really never sat down and watched it.’

Donald Segretti later successfully rebuilt his life as a lawyer in California

Donald Segretti later successfully rebuilt his life as a lawyer in California

Segretti in the 1970s amid the Watergate storm

Segretti in the 1970s amid the Watergate storm

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‘That’s really what it was (pranks,)’ he added. ‘I knew nothing about Watergate, but they (the media) mixed that up. I had no knowledge of 99 percent of what the hell they (the Watergate conspirators) were doing.’ 

The media ‘just ran over me,’ he said. ‘I was nobody they really knew. It was awful.’

His opinion of the Washington Post journalists, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, is that they were ‘opportunists, to put it nicely.’

When it came to the televised Senate Watergate Committee hearings in 1973. Segretti was honest about the acts of political sabotage he had carried out.

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‘I was trying to survive, get through it, and I did,’ he said. ‘But it was not necessarily easy or pleasant because I’m generally a relatively shy person.

‘All of a sudden, I got in the middle of something that was way beyond my control. The dynamics of it were immense, and I was in the middle of it.

‘It was a show, a political show. I looked across the table and the senators were all in makeup, TV makeup. The questions were all framed in a certain way. It was a show. I was one of the puppets.’

The star witness of the hearings was Nixon’s White House Counsel John Dean.

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‘He was for John Dean,’ said Segretti. ‘I’m sorry, my viewpoint may be different than a lot of people.’

In 1974, Segretti pleaded guilty to three misdemeanor counts of distributing illegal campaign literature, relating to the Muskie dirty tricks.

He served four months in prison, the second half of it in an unusual setting.

‘I walked in, and I was in like a witness protection program, and there were maybe 12 other people there, and they looked at me and they greeted me in Italian, because most of them were mafia, mafia from the east coast,’ he said. ‘Everybody was pleasant to me. They couldn’t figure out why I was there.’

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His California law license was suspended for two years, with authorities taking into account his remorse and cooperation with Watergate investigators.

Donald Segretti in 1973 after appearing before the Watergate grand jury

Donald Segretti in 1973 after appearing before the Watergate grand jury

A newspaper announces the resignation of President Richard Nixon

A newspaper announces the resignation of President Richard Nixon

Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the investigative journalists for the Washington Post who uncovered the Watergate scandal

Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the investigative journalists for the Washington Post who uncovered the Watergate scandal

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Two decades later, in 1995, Segretti ran for a Superior Court judgeship in Orange County, California – but the specter of Watergate still loomed large.

‘At one point, I was told you’d make a wonderful judge, and I ran as a judge, but the press got all over it,’ Segretti said. ‘I said it’s not going to work, it’s just not, there’s no dignity to to doing this, inappropriate for that office, it’s not going to make sense.

‘They drug up a lot of nasty stuff, and a lot of it untrue.

‘But that’s the way they focused it and, you know, once they write something in a newspaper, whether it’s right or wrong, it’s in print, and if you’re an individual without something behind you, it becomes fact. Fiction becomes fact.’

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By 2000, Segretti was an Orange County co-chair of John McCain’s presidential campaign. There were no dirty tricks.

‘Believe me, we didn’t do anything like this,’ he said. ‘I ran a very straightforward campaign. Unfortunately, we didn’t get the nomination at that time.

‘And that was my last involvement with politics. It can be very brutal and nasty.’

Donald Segretti is still working as a lawyer aged 84

Donald Segretti is still working as a lawyer aged 84

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He added: ‘I worked hard, through grit and perseverance I built a comfortable practice, got married, raised a family, have a wonderful daughter and grandchildren, and led a productive, quiet life.

‘I do business law, I still do some bankruptcy to help people that get into trouble, and help them get through difficult times in their lives. And I used my experience during that time to understand what people go through and try to help them out.’

These days he views goings-on in Washington ‘from the provinces’ and is shocked by some of what he sees.

‘I’m appalled,’ he said. ‘I have particular viewpoints on a lot of things, but number one, there’s too much money in politics. We get the wrong people in. The wrong people are running for office. Many of the wrong people have been elected to office.’

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He is concerned by some Supreme Court decisions, including Citizens United, which allowed money to flood into political campaigning, and ‘decisions with regard to more power to the executive, decisions regarding immunity of the President to certain acts, I disagree with all of this.’

Segretti added: ‘We’ve gotten away from the country that used to be, and the way it was formed, and the thinking that went behind it.

‘So, it’s a very unnerving time for the country, and in some ways, although Watergate was a watershed, what’s happened now is profound and will last a lot longer than some of the lessons of Watergate.’

Asked to compare Nixon and President Trump, he said: ‘Well, they’re completely different. Nixon, in his heart, with all his flaws, and he had many, wanted to do the right thing for the country. I think Trump has different views. It’s all about Trump and his family. That’s a pretty dogmatic statement, I guess. Maybe not completely true. They’re both flawed but different ways.’

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Segretti descibed himself as an 'old-fashioned Republican - I liked Eisenhower.'

Segretti descibed himself as an ‘old-fashioned Republican – I liked Eisenhower.’

Segretti said he ‘broke’ with Nixon a long time ago, but is still a Republican.

‘I’m a old-fashioned Republican. I liked Eisenhower,’ he said.

‘We don’t have a strong two-party system. The Democrats are off on a tangent. They haven’t done much to have checks and balances, and it’s all about power between the two parties. They seem to sacrifice what’s good for the country.

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‘I think we’re seeing problems going on with our government right now, right under our feet. I think in the long, longer medium term, I think hopefully America will rejuvenate itself, but in the short term, we’re going through a very rough time period. We’ve got some institutional flaws. I don’t think we’ve had good leadership in either party.’

Meanwhile, Watergate seems a very long time ago.

‘I closed the chapter on that,’ he said. ‘I tell clients, many times when they go through a trauma in their life, let’s close the chapter on that and look forward and go on. That’s what I did, and hopefully others will do the same.’

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Sunderland’s empty Debenhams unit eyed for karting and leisure complex

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Sunderland’s empty Debenhams unit eyed for karting and leisure complex

The long‑vacant Debenhams unit at The Bridges Shopping Centre in Sunderland is the subject of new plans to turn it into a multi‑storey go‑karting and entertainment hub, bringing noise, neon and new life back to one of the centre’s biggest spaces.

The building has stood empty since Debenhams closed in May 2021, but if the vision goes ahead, shoppers could soon be watching karts whizz past where mannequins once stood.

Under the proposals, the old store would be gutted and reimagined as a high‑energy venue operated by TeamSport, with two 16‑kart tracks, a dedicated “mini racers” circuit for younger drivers, bowling lanes, a sizeable arcade and new restaurant areas.

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The idea is to create a place where families, groups of friends and work nights out can all find something to do under one roof – whether they’re chasing lap times or just cheering from the sidelines.

Planning documents acknowledge that the former department store is “no longer suited to modern retail requirements”, and warn that leaving such a prominent anchor unit empty drags down footfall and activity in The Bridges and the wider city centre.

The hope is that a big leisure draw will flip that on its head, encouraging trips, keeping people in the city for longer, and helping Sunderland’s centre feel busier and more vibrant into the evening as well as during the day.

If the plans are approved, the scheme is expected to create around 40 full‑time equivalent jobs, from track marshals and bar staff to technicians and managers.

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Crucially, the project is designed to plug into what’s already there rather than starting from scratch.

Access and parking arrangements would remain unchanged, with visitors using the existing shopping centre entrances and car parks.

The proposal still has to go through consultation and the usual planning process, but if it gets the green light, one of Sunderland’s quietest corners could soon become one of its loudest, and liveliest.

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Andy Burnham sits in Cardiff city centre and invites public to ‘ask anything’

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Wales Online

The next Prime Minister was quizzed by the public on a series of issues

Andy Burnham took to the streets of Cardiff to speak to people in the city centre as he prepares to become Prime Minister on Monday. The former Greater Manchester mayor held an ‘ask me anything’ event as he invited people to sit down next to him and ask him about his plans.

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Posting a two-and-a-half minute video of his visit, Burnham wrote: “When I said I was going to do politics differently, I meant it.

“Yesterday I spent a couple of hours in Cardiff city centre inviting people to ask me anything about my plans for the UK.”

Accompanied by the song Blue Monday by New Order, the video showed the Labour MP for Makerfield pose for selfies with the public, and was questioned on a range of matters. Never miss a Cardiff story by signing up to our daily newsletter here.

Footage of the visit:

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These included affordable housing, to which he promised “the biggest house building program in the post-war period”.

He also shared how his dad has Alzheimer’s, and how he had become familiar with the social care situation, and promised to devote spending in the area.

He added that keeping people safe was the “first responsibility of any prime minister”, when questioned about defending the realm.

Asked what would be the soundtrack to his first 100 days as Prime Minister, he responded: “One Day Like This by Elbow.”

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The former Greater Manchester mayor’s premiership has already been confirmed after he received the backing of 369 of the party’s 403 MPs, making it mathematically impossible for a rival to enter the contest.

Under Labour rules, candidates need the backing of 81 MPs to stand in a contest, meaning Mr Burnham is set for a coronation.

He has also won the support of eight of the 11 unions affiliated with the party.

Sir Keir Starmer pledged to give his “wholehearted support” to Mr Burnham as he made his final appearance at the despatch box in the House of Commons.

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Asked whether he had any advice for Mr Burnham, Sir Keir said: “I will give my wholehearted support to my successor.

“I want this Labour Government to be a success. I want our country to be a success. I shall give my support privately if asked for, not publicly when not asked for.”

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