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NewsBeat

Stockton foster carers honoured at emotional awards night

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Stockton foster carers honoured at emotional awards night

Stockton Council hosted the Foster Carer and Supported Lodgings Awards on Thursday, April 30, to honour the dedication and resilience of foster carers and hosts across the borough who support vulnerable children and young people.

Councillor Clare Besford, the council’s cabinet member for children and young people, presented the Long Service and Special Milestone Awards.

Cllr Clare Besford presenting a special milestone award to foster carers Colin Taylor and Pat Bond for 15 years of service (Image: Dave Charnley)

Cllr Besford said: “I’m immensely proud to celebrate our wonderful foster carers and supported lodgings hosts in our borough with these awards.

“It was an honour to celebrate their long and devoted service and hear about the outstanding achievements which they have made in the lives of children and young people in their care.

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“Congratulations to all the winners and nominees.”

Foster Carer of the Year – Wendy Fowler (Image: Dave Charnley)

Carers and hosts were recognised across several categories, including long service, special milestones, and peer-to-peer support.

Special Milestone Awards were presented to those who reached one, five, 10, 15, and 20 years of service.

Long Service Awards went to those who had dedicated more than 30 years, including Margaret Wren (49 years), Malcolm and Shelley Atherton (33 years), and Patricia and Kenny Leishman (32 years).

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Majella McCarthy, Director of Children’s Services with Foster Carer of the Year Wendy Fowler (Image: Dave Charnley)

The Young People’s Choice Award, with nominations submitted by children living with a foster family, was given to Sue and Stuart Reid in recognition of the support they provide to the young person living with them.

Julie and Paul Snowball received the Peer‑to‑Peer Recognition Award, which honours carers who support fellow foster families.

The couple play a key role in the Mockingbird fostering service, an extended family model designed to improve stability and outcomes for children by building a supportive community of carers.

Cllr Clare Besford presenting the 20 years of service award to Supported Lodgings Hosts Christine and Stephen Morgan (Image: Dave Charnley)

Julie Snowball said: “As I said on the night to the people who nominated me, it means the world to me but you are only as good as the people that you are surrounded by, and I’m surrounded by wonderful people, so it’s an honour for me to support them and I thoroughly enjoy doing it.”

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Hazel and Wayne Micallef received the Supported Lodgings Host of the Year Award after being nominated three times.

The couple currently care for two teenagers, helping them build the confidence and skills needed for independence.

Foster Carer Julie Snowball, winner of the Peer-to-Peer Award with Louise Hollick, Assistant Director of Early Help, Safeguarding and Children (Image: Dave Charnley)

Supported lodgings hosts offer a home environment and practical guidance to young people as they transition into adulthood.

The Kinship Carer of the Year Award went to Pauline and Colin Poppleton.

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Nominated by their grandchildren’s social worker, they were recognised for the emotional warmth, security, and sense of identity they provide, helping the children in their care make positive progress.

Wendy Fowler, who has spent more than 21 years as a foster carer, was named Foster Carer of the Year.

Ms Fowler said: “I was very surprised and quite emotional.

“From a personal level, it’s a great achievement for me, fostering is the best thing I’ve ever done in my life.”

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She recently decided to retire due to health reasons.

Ms Fowler said: “I was very upset when I decided that I needed to retire, it took me a long time to think about it, but I thought the time was right because I hadn’t been very well last year.

“Now is the time to retire and spend a lot of time with my grandchildren and my children.”

Many of the children she has cared for over the years have remained in contact with her.

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Ms Fowler said: “I’ve got other foster children as well because they stay in touch after all these years, they are still around and remain an important part of my life.

“I’ve loved every minute of fostering, and I would recommend anyone to do it because it gives more positives than negatives, it really does.”

For information on becoming a foster carer, visit the Foster with North East website.

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Hantavirus latest: Cruise ship to dock in Tenerife early Sunday as UK sends plane to evacuate passengers

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Hantavirus cruise ship latest: Foreign Office warns British travellers virus is health concern in Argentina

Why are cruise ships prone to disease outbreaks? From hantavirus to COVID

Cruises are sold as floating holidays, but they are also useful for understanding public health. Cruise ships are carefully designed places where many people live, eat, relax and move through the same shared spaces for days at a time. They show how easily illness can spread when people are packed into a single interconnected environment.

Think of a cruise ship as a temporary city at sea. It has restaurants, theatres, lifts, cabins, kitchens, water systems and indoor gathering spaces. That is great for convenience, but it also means that once an infection gets on board, it can move through the ship in ways that are hard to stop.

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The Diamond Princess outbreak is perhaps the best-known example. During the 2020 COVID outbreak, 619 passengers and crew tested positive for the disease. Researchers found that the ship conditions made the novel coronavirus spread more easily. Their modelling suggested that public health measures, such as isolation and quarantine, prevented many more cases, but it also showed that an earlier response would have further limited the outbreak.

Norovirus (the so-called vomiting bug) is the infection most closely linked to cruise ships. In a review of previously published studies, researchers found 127 reports of norovirus outbreaks on cruise ships, with many linked to contaminated food, contaminated surfaces and person-to-person spread. A more recent report from the US also showed that norovirus can spread very rapidly from person to person on a cruise ship.

This helps explain why ships such as Celebrity Mercury, Explorer of the Seas and Carnival Triumph have become familiar names in outbreak reports. These were not unusual in some special way; they were simply settings where shared dining, close contact and frequent movement through common areas allowed infection to spread fast.

Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 15:30

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How many Britons have been infected with hantavirus?

British health authorities confirmed on Friday that a third British national aboard the MV Hondius was suspected of being infected with hantavirus.

The UK Health Security Agency said the person is on the island of Tristan da Cunha, a remote British overseas territory in the south Atlantic where the ship stopped in April.

Another two British men, one who was a doctor on the ship, are receiving treatment in the Netherlands and South Africa.

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Martin Anstee, a 56 year old expedition guide, was one of the hantavirus patients evacuated from the boat on Wednesday.

The ship’s 41 year old British doctor was also removed.

Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 15:00

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Hantavirus is giving me Covid flashbacks – so how worried should I be?

The sight of people in hazmat suits alongside phrases like ‘self-isolation’ dominating the airwaves is bringing back troubling memories for Katie Rosseinsky, who considers whether we should all start stocking up on toilet roll:

Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 14:30

Health experts write guidance to contain first ship-borne hantavirus outbreak

As the cruise ship hit by a hantavirus outbreak sails towards Tenerife, World Health Organization officials are racing to draw up step-by-step guidance for what should happen next for the nearly 150 passengers ⁠when they finally reach land on Sunday.

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Because this is the first ever hantavirus outbreak recorded on a cruise ship, official say new protocols are needed.

WHO officials and hantavirus experts said the outbreak could be managed by adapting standard public health steps, like isolating sick passengers or those ⁠who may have been in contact with them.

None of the ​passengers ⁠on the ship now have symptoms, the ship’s operator has said.

Officials are also seeking tips from Argentina, where a previous outbreak of the Andes virus, the same strain as on ⁠the ship, was snuffed out in 2019.

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“If we follow public health measures and the lessons we learned from Argentina we can break this chain of transmission. This doesn’t need to be a large epidemic,” Abdi Rahman Mahamud, director of the WHO’s alert and response coordination department, said.

Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 14:00

WHO warn six week incubation period could mean further hantavirus cases reported

WHO warn six week incubation period could mean further hantavirus cases reported

Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 13:30

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What are the symptoms of hantavirus and how is it treated?

What are the symptoms?

  • Fever
  • Extreme fatigue
  • Muscle aches
  • Stomach pain
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhoea
  • Shortness of breath
  • Symptoms usually appear between 2 to 4 weeks after being exposed to the virus, but there are reports of symptoms occurring up to 40 days after exposure.

How is the virus treated?

There is currently no vaccine or specific antiviral treatment for hantavirus infections.

Treatment is supportive and based on symptoms, such as hospital care and respiratory support for breathing difficulties.

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Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 13:00

WHO chief arrives in Spain to coordinate evacuation

Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 12:33

Singapore says two cruise ship passengers test negative for hantavirus

The Independent’s Alisha Rahaman Sarkar writes:

Two Singaporeans who were on board the MV Hondius cruise ship struck by a hantavirus outbreak have tested negative for the virus, the island nation’s Communicable Diseases Agency (CDA) has confirmed.

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The CDA’s public health laboratory conducted testing on multiple samples collected from the individuals ​and confirmed that hantavirus, including the Andes virus, was not detected, ​it said.

The Singaporeans on board the MV Hondius – two men aged 67 and 65 – were isolated at the National Centre for Infectious Diseases. ​They were on board the cruise ship when it departed from the Argentinian port of Ushuaia ‌on ⁠1 April, the CDA said in a statement.

The duo will be quarantined for 30 days from the date of last exposure as an added precaution and will undergo further testing before being released. They will then be ​monitored through phone ​surveillance for the ⁠remainder of 45 days, the maximum incubation period for hantavirus exposure.

“The risk to the general public in Singapore ​remains low,” the agency said, adding it was closely ​monitoring the ⁠situation.

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Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 12:30

WHO chief arrives in Spain ahead of passenger disembarkation from Hantavirus cruise ship

The head of the World ⁠Health Organisation has touched down in Spain today, where he will join senior ⁠government ​officials in ⁠Tenerife to oversee the ⁠evacuation of passengers ​on the hantavirus-hit cruise ship.

Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebrey said he was in contact with the ship’s captain and a WHO colleague that is on board the boat.

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There are no additional people on ⁠board showing symptoms of ‌Hantavirus, he said.

Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 12:13

What has Trump said about the hantavirus outbreak?

Donald Trump said yesterday that hantavirus was “under very good control” in the US.

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”We have it,” he told reporters. “We have very good people looking at it. It seems to be okay. They know the virus very well, they’ve worked with it for a long time.

“[It’s] not easy to pass on. We hope that’s true.”

He added it was “not easily transferable, unlike Covid.”

Asked if the US would consider leaving the World Health Organisation over the outbreak, he said: “No, we seem to have things under very good control.”

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In an update on Friday, the US centre for disease control (CDC), said: “To date, no cases of Andes virus have been reported in the United States as a result of this outbreak.

“At this time, the overall risk to travellers and the American public remains extremely low. Routine travel can continue as normal.

“CDC is working with the US state department and other US government partners to get Americans on the ship home as quickly and as safely as possible.”

Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 12:00

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Women’s Six Nations 2026: Italy 33-61 England – Red Roses close in on Grand Slam

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Marlie Packer scores

Italy: Ostuni Minuzzi; Muzzo, Sillari, Mannini, D’Inca; Madia, Stefan; Turani, Vecchini, Zanette, Fedrighi, Frangipani, Veronese, Ranuccini, Giordano (c).

Replacements: Cheli, Maris, Dosi, Duca, Sgorbini, Bitonci, Stevanin, Granzotto.

England: Sing; Venner, Jones (c), Rowland, Kildunne; Harrison, L Packer; Clifford, Cokayne, Muir, Lutui, Burns, Short, M Packer, Burton.

Replacements: Powell, Carson, Bern, Balogun, Head, Robinson, Aitchison, Moloney-MacDonald.

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Dog saved in dramatic six hour pit rescue on North Yorkshire Moors

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Dog saved in dramatic six hour pit rescue on North Yorkshire Moors

Scarborough and Ryedale Mountain Rescue Team (SRMRT) were called out after the animal fell around 6.5 metres down a narrow, winding pit on Friday (May 8).

In an online post, the team said: “Yesterday’s rescue was certainly a different one for the team…”

Rescuers attempting to save the dog (Image: Scarborough and Ryedale Mountain Rescue Team)

The dog is believed to have slipped through several tight gaps during the fall, which may have reduced the impact but left her trapped deep underground.

SRMRT added: “Somehow, gravity had carried her through several extremely tight gaps, which likely helped break the fall, but also left her trapped deep underground.”

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Mountain rescue crews (Image: Scarborough and Ryedale Mountain Rescue Team)

A major rescue effort was launched, involving mountain rescue volunteers, North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service, North Yorkshire Police and Upper Wharfedale Fell Rescue Association.

Emergency services at the scene (Image: Scarborough and Ryedale Mountain Rescue Team)

The team described it as “an outstanding six-hour-long joint effort” involving multiple emergency services.

After hours of careful planning and teamwork, a cave rescuer was able to squeeze through the tight underground system to reach the dog.

SRMRT said: “After careful assessment and a lot of teamwork, cave rescuer Lucy managed to squeeze down through the tight system to reach the dog and bring her safely back out.”

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The dog was then safely brought back to the surface, bringing the challenging rescue to a happy ending.

The team added it was “a technical, challenging and very muddy rescue”, thanking all agencies involved for their support.

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UK weather: Warm weekend forecast before temperatures drop next week

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Nadine wrapped up in arctic gear. She has a fur coat, beaver fur gloves, and lots of equipment on her face.

If you’ve seen forecasts of snow next week flash up on your social media feed over the last few days, you may be thinking that winter is about to return.

While snow is not expected over the vast majority of the UK, it is true that rather cool conditions for May are set to dominate.

With high pressure centred to the west of the UK, winds will mainly come from that chillier northerly direction. During the second half of the week our air will have originated from around the Arctic Circle in northern Scandinavia.

Daytime temperatures for most will be much colder than normal at 9-14 Celsius (48-57F) in many areas.

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Areas of low pressure crossing southwards across the country will bring a greater likelihood of rain and, like last week, some snow in Shetland and the Scottish mountains cannot be ruled out.

As well as snow, last week also brought the UK its coldest May conditions for nearly 30 years. Tomintoul in Moray, Scotland recorded a low of -6.8C (20F) on the night of the 5/6 May. This was the lowest temperature recorded in May since 1997 when the same temperature was reported at Leadhills, Lanarkshire.

Further night frosts are expected in places during the week ahead.

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MOVA Studios set to open in Hargrave House, Acomb

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MOVA Studios set to open in Hargrave House, Acomb

MOVA Studios is set to welcome its first visitors during an open day on Saturday (May 16).  

The business will offer Reformer Pilates, Mat Pilates and Yoga, alongside a Run Club, in classes which will begin on Monday (May 18) at Hargrave House, in Boroughbridge Road, Acomb.


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It was founded by York-based Pilates instructor Ruby McTough, who will bring her years of experience in the mind-body exercise to sessions at the studio.

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MOVA StudiosThe studio will offer Reformer Pilates, Mat Pilates, Yoga and a Run Club (Image: MOVA Studios)

She explained: “How you feel in your body and how you feel in your life are the same thing.

“What you put into yourself, you carry back out into your day. What you put into your community, you feel inside the studio.

“We want MOVA to live in both places, and to live there with our members.”

Aside from the sessions, MOVA has been building links with independent York businesses ahead of its opening.

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MOVA Studios“What you put into yourself, you carry back out into your day” (Image: MOVA Studios)

Partners include York Gin, York Distillery, Wardrobe Angel, Bothy Botanical, Avorium and Brancusi, with MOVA members able to receive small benefits at each business.

Ruby said the partnerships were about strengthening connections rather than offering discounts.

She said: “Community doesn’t end at our front door. York is full of people putting their whole hearts into what they make.

“We want our members to know them, and we want them to know us. That’s how a studio becomes part of a place, instead of just a place inside it.”

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Tom at Avorium said that York is “at its best” when independent businesses look out for one another.

He added: “That’s exactly the spirit we feel from MOVA. We’re proud to be one of their first Local Love partners.”

MOVA StudiosMOVA is offering a Founders Membership for first-time visitors (Image: MOVA Studios)

A Founders Membership is now available for those who want to join the studio from the outset.

Ruby said: “We’re starting with the people who choose to start with us.

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“Whatever MOVA becomes, the founding members are part of how it got there. That story doesn’t get written twice.”

First-time visitors can try MOVA with a £35 introductory three-class pass.

For more on this, please see here.  

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Police called to Quenby Road in Billingham after assault

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Police called to Quenby Road in Billingham after assault

Officers from Cleveland Police were called to Quenby Road in Billingham at around 10pm on Friday (May 8), following reports of an assault.

A man, aged 39, sustained an injury to his ear during the incident.

Cleveland Police have said that they are now looking for ‘several men armed with knives’ after launching an investigation.

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Detective Chief Inspector John Bonner said: “Shortly before 10pm on Friday, May 8, police were called to Quenby Road in Billingham following reports of an assault involving several men armed with knives.

“One man, aged 39, sustained an injury to his ear.

“Enquiries are progressing, and anyone who has information or footage that could assist with enquiries is asked to call 101 quoting reference number 087533.”

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Dog dies after eating cannabis at Cambridgeshire town park as warning issued to owners

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Cambridgeshire Live

A warning has been issued to dog owners who may be walking their pets

A dog has died after it “ingested cannabis” at a Cambridgeshire town park. Soham Town Council have confirmed that three dogs have reportedly “ingested cannabis” after being walked at Drayton Meadows in Soham.

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According to the council, as a result, one of the dogs has died. A spokesperson for Soham Town Council said: “We have found that cannabis gummies are being left behind which is a serious concern for young children as they resemble real sweets like Haribo. Please be vigilant if you are there with your children or dogs.”

At least one of the cases has been confirmed to be Cannabis by a vet.

The council has advised dog owners to make sure that dogs are on leads to avoid them “running into any overgrown areas where things may have been thrown”.

The police and local youth services are aware, and the council are hoping to patrol the area if volunteers are available. In a statement by Soham Town Council, a spokesperson added: “We are unable to close the area completely as it would still be accessible by climbing over the gate, so would likely not act as a deterrent for those hanging around there.”

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Does a Plaid Cymru win mean Welsh independence could be on the horizon?

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Does a Plaid Cymru win mean Welsh independence could be on the horizon?

“As the National Party of Wales, the party’s aims shall be: to secure independence for Wales in Europe.”

Since its founding in 1925, independence has remained a core principle of Plaid Cymru – the above quote even forms the second line of its constitution. For the first time, Plaid secured the most seats in the next Welsh parliament as Labour lost control of the Senedd for the first time since devolution in 1999, with even first minister Eluned Morgan a casualty of Labour’s catastrophic losses. Yet in a change of tone from previous decades, Plaid’s leader, Rhun ap Iorwerth, has not led with an independence campaign, and more talk of a referendum has come from his political rivals, who have tried to warn voters that the party will introduce it through the “back door” once in power.

At Plaid’s annual conference in Newport in February, the topic was not raised once in ap Iorwerth’s speech, nor was it mentioned at the manifesto launch in Wrexham. At the last Senedd elections in 2021, the party promised to hold a referendum if it won a majority – a pledge that was quietly dropped from this year’s campaign.

Rhun ap Iorwerth at a Senedd election count in Llandudno
Rhun ap Iorwerth at a Senedd election count in Llandudno (Getty)

Yet for the first time in history, Westminster is faced with the prospect of having a nationalist party running each of the devolved nations, all pushing for greater powers – so what are Plaid Cymru’s plans for independence?

Professor Laura McAllister, of the Wales Governance Centre, said: “Given that independence is the primary aim of Plaid Cymru, it is inconceivable that the party internally has not considered a longer-term strategy for advancing that goal. Having said that, the party leader, Rhun ap Iorwerth, has been categorical that the first term of a Plaid-led government would not be focused on independence.”

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Instead, ap Iorwerth has prioritised the cost of living crisis; the state of the NHS, which has failed to meet targets to cut waiting lists; housing and a better deal for Wales under the current constitution. Their next steps do include a national commission, which would cost half a million pounds of the annual £27bn Welsh budget, which it says would “lay the foundation” for any future independence plans.

Plaid Cymru are set to become the biggest party in Wales with Labour dropping to third place
Plaid Cymru are set to become the biggest party in Wales with Labour dropping to third place (AFP/Getty)

Recent polls have not shown much support for Welsh independence, with only 32 per cent in favour and 52 per cent against. While he remains a personal believer in the cause, ap Iorwerth admitted during his campaign: “I do not think now is the time to have that referendum, because the people of Wales are not telling us that it’s that time.” However, Prof McAllister noted that this tactic “is very much out of the SNP playbook from 2007”, and that polling support for independence is similar to the position in Scotland two years before the 2014 referendum that rejected independence.

With Labour suffering a humiliating defeat on Thursday, slipping to third place in its former red heartlands, Plaid Cymru had pinned the election as a “two-horse race” between itself and Reform UK, which is staunchly opposed to further devolved powers.

Nigel Farage described Welsh people as ‘foreign speakers’
Nigel Farage described Welsh people as ‘foreign speakers’ (Getty)

Many have viewed it as an election between those who view themselves as more Welsh-aligned, and others who view themselves as more British – with Nigel Farage even describing the Welsh language as “foreign”.

“In terms of voters motivated against independence, at present I think those will already be captured by Reform UK,” Prof McAllister said. “It’s harder to predict in the future as we do not know what a Plaid-led government might do and when. But were independence to become a defining issue in Welsh politics, as it is in Scottish politics, then I think we would see a fundamental realignment that cuts across left-right lines.”

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Labour MPs have put Starmer on notice after election battering. Can he turn it around?

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Labour MPs have put Starmer on notice after election battering. Can he turn it around?

Without a clear contender, ready to go, the prospect of forcing Starmer to lay out a timetable now for leaving No 10 would, these allies say, look crackers to already-fed-up voters. They feel it would send the message: “Dear country, we can’t make a decision, so we want a bit more time ’til we do.”

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All of the local election results from across Cambridgeshire

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Cambridgeshire Live

All of the results have now been announced

Results came in thick and fast across Cambridgeshire today (May 8) for this year’s local elections. All the results have now been declared, with two seats in Huntingdonshire being the last to be announced.

Cambridgeshire County Council had its elections last year so only residents with a lower tier council election voted yesterday. Across the country different councils hold their elections in different stages. Some have a third of councillor wards up for election, others have them all up and others have had no elections at all.

For South Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire, all wards have been up for election. Cambridge City Council had a third of seats up for election. East Cambridgeshire District Council and Fenland District Council do not have elections this year.

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Take a look below to see the results across all of the council which held elections.

In Peterborough, the following parties were elected with Independents having overall control of the council.

  • Independent – one elected – a loss of five
  • Conservative – six elected – a gain of three
  • Labour – two elected – a loss of three
  • Lib Dem – three elected – no change
  • Greens – two elected – a gain of one
  • Reform UK – four elected – a gain of four

In Huntingdonshire, nobody managed to get a majority.

  • Conservative – 15 elected
  • Greens – two elected
  • Independent – four elected
  • Labour – one elected
  • Liberal Democrats – 20 elected
  • Reform UK – 10 elected

In Cambridge, only a third of seats were up for election, but still no parrt managed to achieve overall control. A total of 15 seats were up for election.

  • Labour – four elected
  • Liberal Democrats – four elected
  • Greens – seven elected

In South Cambridgeshire, the Liberal Democrats secured a huge majority, winning 43 out of 45 seats.

Liberal Democrats – 43 elected

Conservative – two elected

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To see the full results when they come in look at the widget below and enter your council’s name to see the latest.

Keep an eye on our live blog for the latest updates

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