Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

NewsBeat

The Dark – Laura Donnelly reveals what attracted her to the role

Published

on

The Dark - Laura Donnelly reveals what attracted her to the role

The 44-year-old, known for her roles in The Fall and Outlander, stars as Detective Monica Kennedy in The Dark, a new series based on Scottish crime writer G R Halliday’s novel From the Shadows.

Set in the Scottish wilderness, the series follows Kennedy as she investigates the staged killing of a young man.

As paranoia spreads, long-held secrets begin to surface and locals realise a serial killer may be hiding among them.

The six-part series also stars The Last Kingdom actor Mark Rowley and Friends actress Helen Baxendale.

Advertisement

Donnelly said she found it interesting that the series focused on missing men, as women are more commonly portrayed as victims in crime dramas.

“Obviously, it’s far more common for the victims to be women, not that it doesn’t happen to men, but it is much more common with women,” she said.

“What I really liked about this first storyline was that we weren’t getting that familiar dynamic. In particular, I appreciated that it wasn’t accompanied by gratuitous violence and gore.

“We’ve seen women being hunted and killed on our screens so often over the years, and while that is, of course, the reality in many cases, it can also feel very gratuitous.”

Advertisement

In the series, Detective Kennedy balances her demanding career with raising her daughter.

“I think what I really, really adored about this character, and about the first scripts I read, was how little being a mother impacts the way she does her job,” she said.

“It certainly affects her relationship with her child, there’s no question about that, but she doesn’t allow the fact that she’s a mum to affect the way she works.”

She added: “I love that motherhood doesn’t stop or hinder any aspect of what Monica does, whether she’s being reckless, putting her own life on the line, or throwing herself into a situation in a completely inadvisable way.

Advertisement

“She doesn’t even think twice about the long hours she has to work. She simply relies on the fact that her mum has things under control and will look after Lucy while she gets on with the job she believes she was put on this earth to do.

“I think Monica feels she was put on this earth to solve these kinds of crimes, not to be a mother. That really appealed to me about this character.”

Laura Donnelly leads the cast of The Dark on ITV, which is an adaptation of GR Halliday’s novel From the Shadows (Image: ITV)

Rowley, 36, who plays Detective Conor Crawford, revealed that he spoke to a Highlands-based detective while researching the role, using those insights to help create an authentic portrayal of detective work.

“I ended up speaking to a superintendent who had previously been in charge of the Highlands in Inverness. It was really interesting talking to him,” said the Scottish actor.

Advertisement

“It’s not something we’ve explored in great detail in our show because we’ve taken a different direction, but one thing he said they’re increasingly finding difficult is social media.

“When people post things online, there’s often an assumption that it’s evidence, when in reality it isn’t. The challenge is identifying the core evidence that can actually stand up in court and lead to a conviction. I found that fascinating.

“I suppose it all comes back to detectives hunting for the truth, and that can take you down many different paths.

“In the show, there are moments where we find one tiny piece of evidence, and that’s the key that unlocks everything.”

Advertisement

Episode 2 of The Dark is on ITV tonight at 9pm and ITVX.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

NewsBeat

BBC’s ‘superb’ new drama has viewers binge-watching all episodes in one day

Published

on

Wales Online

A thrilling whodunnit premiered on the BBC at the weekend, and viewers are already hooked

BBC viewers are already loving a mystery series that aired at the weekend.

Advertisement

Six-part mystery series I, Jack Wright is written by Chris Lang, who is known for his work on Unforgotten, Innocent, and The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe.

The drama first debuted in April 2025 on U&Alibi, but has now been acquired by the BBC. Season one is currently being re-aired by the broadcaster, with season two also expected to air on BBC One.

I, Jack Wright has been described as a “propulsive whodunnit” with family secrets at its core.

“The apparent death by suicide of high-powered businessman Jack Wright sends shockwaves through his family, leaving a mystery that pits greed, loyalty and suspicion against one another,” reads the official synopsis.

Advertisement

“As his many wives and children fight over the remains of his estate, a dogged police detective investigates – and uncovers the shocking truth about this well-heeled clan.”

The series features a stacked cast, including John Simm, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Gemma Jones, Zoë Tapper, Daniel Rigby, Ruby Ashbourne Serkis, Harry Lloyd, Liz Kingsman, Percelle Ascott, and Niamh Cusack.

I, Jack Wright premiered on BBC One on Sunday (July 12), with another instalment airing on Monday night (July 13). However, most viewers had already binged the entire series by the time the second episode was broadcast live.

Advertisement

Sharing their delight on X (formerly Twitter), one person wrote: “Already binged this. Simm is excellent, as are [the] rest of the cast. Oh but I do hate it when rich, entitled people call Josh, Joshy!”

Another added: “We binged the lot and loved it all!! Such messy lives, red herrings galore and blind endings! Money certainly doesn’t bring happiness with that lot! Loved it all!”

A third said: “There has to be another series of #IJackWright. We binged watched the lot, absolutely superb,” while someone else noted: “Watched this on alibi when it first aired. Liked it. Watching it again in anticipation for S2.”

Advertisement

After the drama first aired last year, fans were quick to describe it as “faultless”, and a “cut above the rest”.

Sue Deeks, Head of Scripted Pre-buy Acquisitions at the BBC, previously said in a statement: “I, Jack Wright is a terrific family thriller. Full of enjoyable performances, with really clever twists and turns, it is simply pure entertainment.”

Polly Williams, Executive Producer at Federation Stories, added: “I, Jack Wright is a riotous, pacey treat and we are so thrilled that series one and two will air on the BBC.

“Dysfunctional families are endlessly fascinating, and in I, Jack Wright, Chris has created an unforgettable crew whom we hope audiences will be appalled, moved, and surprised by.”

Advertisement

I, Jack Wright is available to stream on BBC iPlayer

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Migrant shot and killed by ICE in Maine named as Joan Sebastian Guerrero, 26

Published

on

Horrifying footage has revealed the moment Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents handcuffed a dying migrant on the ground after shooting him during a confrontation in Maine on Monday morning

The 26-year-old migrant fatally shot by ICE in Maine has been identified as Colombia native Joan Sebastian Guerrero. 

Horrifying footage showed the moment Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents handcuffed a dying Guerrero on the ground after shooting him during a confrontation.

In a statement ICE, referred to Guerrero as an ‘illegal alien‘ who ‘attempted to flee the scene’ of a traffic stop when a federal agent fired.

ICE agents were in the are to conduct ‘targeted surveillance on the last known address of an illegal alien with a final order of removal.’

Advertisement

‘The driver of the vehicle was struck, and emergency services were immediately contacted. He passed away from his injuries,’ an ICE spokesperson added in a statement.

The shooting is going to be investigated by DHS’ Office of Inspector General.  

‘This is a developing situation, and we will update the public when more information is available,’ they said.

One of Guerrero’s neighbors, Nelson Elias, told The Portland Press Herald he was convinced of Guerrero’s innocence. 

Advertisement

Horrifying footage has revealed the moment Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents handcuffed a dying migrant on the ground after shooting him during a confrontation in Maine on Monday morning 

An ICE agent fired a barrage of shots through the front windshield of the driver, who was hit in the head and died in front of his family, witnesses said

An ICE agent fired a barrage of shots through the front windshield of the driver, who was hit in the head and died in front of his family, witnesses said 

‘He was just trying to escape. I just know it,’ said Elias, who did not witness the shooting. 

Advertisement

Maine Senator Angus King said Monday that he was informed by Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin that Guerrero was not the target of the arrest warrant. 

Guerrero was killed early on Monday morning in the coastal town of Biddeford. ICE agents seeking to detain him claimed he accelerated his car towards them.

Witnesses said Guerrero was driving his white Kia sedan when an ICE agent opened fire and shot him in the head through his front windshield. 

The shooting unfolded in front of Guerrero’s family, with his toddler-age daughter watching on while wearing Bluey pajamas, according to witness Cecilia Humiston. 

Advertisement

The witness told the Portland Press Herald that an older woman was at the scene yelling at the ICE officers, ‘You took her dad, you took her dad’, and claimed a ‘rude’ officer also yelled at the young girl as she tried to smell flowers nearby. 

Another witness, Daniel Boucher, 71, told NBC News that he heard a barrage of shots fired during the commotion, before seeing the migrant being pulled from a white Kia car with his head bleeding profusely. 

In his final words before dying on the sidewalk, Guerrero told the ICE officers, ‘I tried to stop’, according to Boucher. 

Authorities said the driver was a 26-year-old migrant from Colombia, who had a work authorization permit in the US and a Social Security Number, but he also had a warrant out for his arrest at the time of the shooting and was the target of the ICE operation on Monday

Authorities said the driver was a 26-year-old migrant from Colombia, who had a work authorization permit in the US and a Social Security Number, but he also had a warrant out for his arrest at the time of the shooting and was the target of the ICE operation on Monday 

Advertisement

Details of Guerrero’s identity emerged as footage of the shooting swept social media, with officials saying that he had orders to leave the country and was the target of the fateful ICE operation on Monday. 

Immigration advocacy groups said Guerrero had authorization to work in the US and had a social security number. 

Angus King – who originally said there was a warrant out for his arrest – is now saying DHS Secretary Mullin told him that is not the case. 

‘The secretary shared information with Sen. King as he understood it at the time, and once that info changed, he shared that with Sen. King,’ a spokesperson for King said. 

Advertisement

‘Sen. King wanted to make sure that when he heard differently from the secretary, that Maine knew.’ 

In a statement following outrage over the ICE shooting, the Office of the Maine Attorney General said agents opened fire when Guerrero ‘attempted to flee in a vehicle in the direction of the officer.’

Footage from the scene showed Guerrero’s white Kia vehicle driving slowly in circles at the intersection, as ICE agents ran alongside it. 

Witness Corel Poulin said security footage from his family’s laundromat showed Guerrero’s car rolling into the intersection after he was shot, implying he was leaning on the accelerator at the time. 

Advertisement

The ICE shooting victim's Kia sedan drove in a circle
One of two ICE agents seen chasing the car grabbed at its door

New footage shows a Kia being driven around in circles around the time its owner was shot dead by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Biddeford, Maine on Monday 

‘I don’t believe he was alive when the car started rolling,’ Poulin said. 

Separate Ring camera footage obtained from inside a nearby home by The Maine Wire captured the sound of the deadly confrontation, as a barrage of around five shots were fired rapidly.

Advertisement

Photos taken in the aftermath showed several bullet holes on the windshield of the white Kia sedan being driven by the victim when he was killed.

In the aftermath of the horror shooting, ICE agents and other law enforcement officers were seen hugging and consoling each other on the street. 

Witness Lucas Scott, 18, told the Press Herald that he was driving through the intersection moments before the shooting, and saw a group of unmarked vehicles descend on another car.

He said he saw agents in ICE uniforms confronting the driver of the vehicle, seconds before an agent pulled his weapon and ordered Guerrero to exit his car.

Advertisement

‘The car was put into drive and was trying to hit the ICE officer,’ Scott said. He said he then heard the ICE agent fire several shots quickly.

Locals say ICE had been operating in the town for about a week, and their presence was known throughout the area.

The shooting unfolded at an intersection early on Monday morning in the coastal town of Biddeford, Maine

The shooting unfolded at an intersection early on Monday morning in the coastal town of Biddeford, Maine 

ICE agents and police seen at the scene of the shooting on Monday, as the driver lay dead on the sidewalk after being shot in the head

ICE agents and police seen at the scene of the shooting on Monday, as the driver lay dead on the sidewalk after being shot in the head 

Advertisement
A witness said he saw the driver 'trying to hit the ICE officer', moments before hearing an agent fire roughly four shots

A witness said he saw the driver ‘trying to hit the ICE officer’, moments before hearing an agent fire roughly four shots

Two women hug each other near the scene of the deadly shooting

Two women hug each other near the scene of the deadly shooting

Investigators at the scene on Monday

Investigators at the scene on Monday 

The shooting quickly sparked protests, with one demonstration heading to Maine’s Republican Senator Susan Mills’ office as others filled the streets. 

Advertisement

Maine Congresswoman Chellie Pingree said she was ‘deeply disturbed and angry’ by the news.

‘I, of course, need to know all of the answers here,’ the Democrat said.

Pingree said she wanted to know if the ICE agents were pursuing a migrant with a criminal record or if the shooting was a routine traffic stop, but added, ‘More than anything else, I want to know why you’re in Maine?’

‘Every report we hear is about somebody being picked up who legally was here, and is this going to be another one of those stories?’

Advertisement

It comes just days after an ICE agent fatally shot a Mexican immigrant during a traffic stop in Houston, which sparked mass protests.

Scrutiny on ICE activities was also compounded by the fatal shootings of anti-ICE protesters Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minnesota earlier this year.

The shooting on Monday has quickly led to calls for protest, with the social justice group Biddeford Saco for Racial Justice saying on Facebook that it would be holding a demonstration within a matter of hours.

‘Folks are really upset,’ the group said. ‘I imagine there will be more.’

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Kim Kardashian and Lewis Hamilton cozy up in sweet selfie with her daughter on family holiday

Published

on

Kim Kardashian and Lewis Hamilton took a major step in their relationship as he joined her children and famed family for a scenic lake holiday

Kim Kardashian and Lewis Hamilton took a major step in their relationship as he joined her children and famed family for a scenic lake holiday. 

The reality star, 45, and the F1 ace, 41, showed off their close bond as they posed for a loved-up snap with her daughter Chicago, eight.

In the snap, Hamilton leaned his head on Kardashian as they embraced in the post captioned, ‘summers at the lake with my favorite people.’

Kardashian and Hamilton were also holidaying with her children North, 13, Saint, 10, and Psalm, seven, who she shares with her ex-husband Kanye West.

Advertisement

A casual Kardashian was also seen riding a quad bike and chatting with friends, while sister Khloe Kardashian, 42, joined in on the fun. 

Earlier this month Hamilton gave a sweet nod to his girlfriend on stage at Silverstone ahead of the British Grand Prix.

Kim Kardashian and Lewis Hamilton took a major step in their relationship as he joined her children and famed family for a scenic lake holiday

Advertisement

The giddy racing driver couldn’t help but give Kardashian a shoutout as he took to the fan stage alongside Oliver BearmanLando Norris, Arvid Lindblad and George Russell.

A fan asked Hamilton in the crowd: ‘You’ve been a happier man recently why’s that? Could that be a girlfriend?’

‘You know why he’s asking? He just needs to know if Kimi needs two towels or not,’ broadcaster David Croft joked. 

Hamilton laughed: ‘Yeah – that’s a good one’, before going on to gush over his F1 team. 

Advertisement

He added: ‘Once you spend a year with this team, Ferrari is the most iconic team of all time, and they’ve had a difficult period of time.

‘It’s such an amazing team and they’ve been so welcoming. The first year was obviously very tough but to finally see the hard work we’ve been putting in, it’s finally getting us back to where we want to be.’

Not forgetting to mention his girlfriend, Hamilton added: ‘And of course, of course it’s Kim.’

Hamilton was first romantically linked to SKIMS founder Kardashian earlier this year, yet the Grand Prix marked their first PDA-filled outing. 

Advertisement
Kardashian and Hamilton also also holidaying with her children North (pictured), 13, Saint, 10, and Psalm, seven, who she shares with her ex-husband Kanye West .

Kardashian and Hamilton also also holidaying with her children North (pictured), 13, Saint, 10, and Psalm, seven, who she shares with her ex-husband Kanye West .

A laidback Kardashian holidayed with her pals

A laidback Kardashian holidayed with her pals

Kardashian posed with daughter Chicago and nieces Dream and True

Kardashian posed with daughter Chicago and nieces Dream and True 

Kardashian was seen riding a quad bike with her daughter

Kardashian was seen riding a quad bike with her daughter

Advertisement
Kardashian pouted as she posed with son Psalm

Kardashian pouted as she posed with son Psalm

Her children Saint and Chicago posed for a sweet snap together

Her children Saint and Chicago posed for a sweet snap together

The pair enjoyed a trip to Japan together and they are said to have spent a weekend at Estelle Manor in the Cotswolds, England, as well as visiting Paris, France in early February. 

They also appeared publicly together during the 2026 Super Bowl in February, when they were shown on the stadium’s big screen during the game between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks.

Advertisement

Hamilton – who has previously been linked romantically with singer Nicole Scherzinger and actress Sofía Vergara – and Kardashian had previously known each other for several years.

A source told Us Weekly: ‘Because their relationship started with a friendship first, those closest to them believe this could be endgame for them both.

‘They are both very committed to making things work no matter how long the distance is or how busy they are.’

Meanwhile, Kardashian – who is mother to North, 12, Saint, 10, Chicago, eight, and Psalm, seven, with her ex-husband Kanye West – is said to be taking her new relationship seriously.

Advertisement

A source recently told PEOPLE: ‘[Lewis is] just an easy-going guy with great energy. Her family likes him and Kim’s very into him. They are both busy with their careers, but see each other as much as possible.’

They are said to have ‘more than just a casual connection’ with the insider adding: ‘It takes a lot to capture Kim’s interest and she’s definitely intrigued.’

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

NHS 2026 – The 10 best pharmacies in County Durham

Published

on

NHS 2026 - The 10 best pharmacies in County Durham

Results of the NHS GP Patient Survey 2026 show how patients rated their experiences of using pharmacy services over the previous 12 months.

The survey asked patients whether they had used pharmacy services for reasons including picking up prescriptions, buying medication, getting health advice, having blood pressure checked, getting a vaccine, getting contraception without a GP prescription, or receiving support for a long-term condition.

It also asked those who had used pharmacy services to rate their experience as “very good”, “fairly good”, “neither good nor poor”, “fairly poor” or “very poor”.

A pharmacy service (Image: PA MEDIA)

The figures are grouped by GP practice, rather than by individual pharmacy, and show the proportion of patients at each practice who rated their experience of pharmacy services as “good” overall.

Advertisement

Consett Medical Centre, The Haven Surgery and West Rainton Surgery recorded the highest pharmacy services ratings among the County Durham practices listed, with 99 per cent of patients at each practice describing their experience as good.

At Consett Medical Centre, 75 per cent of patients said their experience was “very good”, while 24 per cent said it was “fairly good”.

The Haven Surgery recorded 70 per cent “very good” responses and 29 per cent “fairly good” responses, while West Rainton Surgery saw 81 per cent of patients describe their experience as “very good” and 18 per cent as “fairly good”.

The Horden Group Practice and Lanchester Medical Centre followed, both with 98 per cent of patients rating their experience of pharmacy services as good.

Advertisement

At The Horden Group Practice, 60 per cent of patients said their experience was “very good” and 38 per cent said it was “fairly good”.

At Lanchester Medical Centre, 70 per cent described their experience as “very good”, while 28 per cent said it was “fairly good”.

Belmont & Sherburn Medical Group, Byron Medical Practice and Villages Medical Group each recorded good ratings of 97 per cent.

Advertisement

Cheveley Park Medical Centre and Gainford Surgery completed the top 10, each with 96 per cent of patients rating their experience of pharmacy services as good.

The top 10 County Durham practices for pharmacy services

  1. Consett Medical Centre — 99 per cent
  2. The Haven Surgery — 99 per cent
  3. West Rainton Surgery — 99 per cent
  4. The Horden Group Practice — 98 per cent
  5. Lanchester Medical Centre — 98 per cent
  6. Belmont & Sherburn Medical Group — 97 per cent
  7. Byron Medical Practice — 97 per cent
  8. Villages Medical Group — 97 per cent
  9. Cheveley Park Medical Centre — 96 per cent
  10. Gainford Surgery — 96 per cent

The number of completed survey forms among the top 10 practices ranged from 73 at Villages Medical Group to 115 at Byron Medical Practice.

For the pharmacy services experience question specifically, the number of responses ranged from 62 at Villages Medical Group to 103 at Byron Medical Practice.

West Rainton Surgery had the highest proportion of patients saying their pharmacy services experience was “very good”, at 81 per cent.

Cheveley Park Medical Centre followed with 83 per cent, while Consett Medical Centre recorded 75 per cent.

Advertisement

All data was compiled from the NHS GP Patient Survey 2026 by adding together the proportion of patients who answered “very good” and “fairly good” when asked about their experience of using pharmacy services.

This data is only from people who participated in the survey.

The results are grouped by patients’ GP practice and do not rank individual pharmacies.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Robert Peston predicts ‘serious financial crash’ in the next year due to Artificial Intelligence

Published

on

Daily Mirror

The political editor of ITV News and former BBC reporter has predicted trouble ahead. But, despite his downbeat ideas of what lies ahead, he insist he is not being totally negative

ITV star Robert Peston, who predicted the 2008 financial crash, has warned of a looming AI-driven market crash.

Advertisement

The political editor of ITV News, 66, previously foresaw not only incoming money issues of the UK, but also warned the government about a flu outbreak in China which led to the covid pandemic.

Now his concerns are around Artificial intelligence. Peston told Radio Times: “I am genuinely anxious that we’re going to get a serious financial crash, globally, in the next year or two, because there is the most astonishing amount of money going into building the data centres and power plants for AI and as we saw when SpaceX floated on the stock exchange, a late-1920s degree of breathless excitement on the markets.

“And I worry that the profits aren’t going to be delivered on a scale to justify all this, so businesses will go bust, investors will take fright and we will have a significant market shock.”

Making things sound even worse, he added: “Despite that, the AI industrial revolution will be possibly the most important one since the Steam Age.

“Even if there is a financial crash, the AI infrastructure will survive it, much like we had a railway boom and bust [in the 1840s], but the railways themselves were still there after. AI and robots will displace incredibly large numbers of jobs, and there may not be conventional productive employment to replace those lost jobs, so how are people going to live?

“And if vast numbers lose their jobs, nobody pays income tax, so the government can’t pay for public services, and society collapses.”

Peston has incorporated some of his feelings and predictions into his latest novel, The Kill Switch. And despite his downbeat ideas of what lies ahead, he insist he is not being totally negative.

Advertisement

He said: “I’m actually a great optimist, but I also think we need to look at possible dystopias in order to prevent them happening.”

Peston was previously a senior journalist for the BBC between 2006 and 2015 and whilst there some viewers ‘hated’ his distinctive intonation. It was his exclusives, particularly with regards to the Northern Rock crisis, that ultimately saw audiences forego their initial hesistance towards him, Peston claimed in 2024 on the podcast Walking the Dog.

At the time, he explained: “Broadly, what happened was I broke a series of important stories, did some investigations, got some scoops. From the middle of 2007 onwards I was giving people information that was directly relevant to their lives (and) which they weren’t getting from anywhere else.“I think at that point people concentrated more on what I was saying rather than on how I was saying it. It is interesting for me looking back on it: I must have a very thick skin because, even though there was a lot of criticism, I didn’t feel particularly anxious. I just kept doing what I was doing and fortunately I then had this breakthrough.”

The broadcaster was appointed the BBC’s business editor in 2006 in what was his first TV role: he had previously worked in print journalism at the Independent, The Financial Times, The Telegraph, and The Sunday Times. He left the BBC in 2015.

Advertisement

Like this story? For more of the latest showbiz news and gossip, follow Mirror Celebs on TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and Threads.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

DANIEL HANNAN: Here’s why the Left revel in the deaths of political opponents in a way Right-wing people never would…

Published

on

Ann was a traditionalist in every sense ¿ she never really accepted the idea of divorce, for example ¿ but it never had the slightest effect on her friendships.

Years ago, my wife took our two little girls into the Oxford Union to show them her picture as an undergraduate.

They feigned polite interest until they saw the photograph of a young Ann Widdecombe. It set them squealing with delight.

They reminisced excitedly for the rest of the morning about her performances on Strictly Come Dancing.

Ann had that effect on people. Yes, her public persona was severe. She leaned into being the nation’s disapproving maiden aunt. But her natural warmth and playfulness shone through despite her best efforts.

Advertisement

She was a traditionalist in every sense – she never really accepted the idea of divorce, for example – but it never had the slightest effect on her friendships.

While she was one of the last figures in public life to reject same-sex partnerships, the gay people who knew her were devastated by her death. The Daily Mail’s Andrew Pierce and the broadcaster Iain Dale were among those who gave public voice to their grief, and many others without platforms expressed similar feelings.

Ann was a traditionalist in every sense – she never really accepted the idea of divorce, for example – but it never had the slightest effect on her friendships.

Advertisement

Peter Tatchell, the long-standing equality agitator, was not among them. His immediate response to the news of her death – for which he later apologised – was to list various LGBT causes she had voted against and to call her a ‘BIGOT!’

It was a bizarre way to respond to the sudden death of a 78-year-old lady, even if, at the time, he was not aware that she had died violently.

Yet he was far from alone.

‘Good riddance’, declared the Socialist Worker, claiming that Ms Widdecombe had ‘dedicated her career to attacking migrants, LGBT+ people and the working class’.

Advertisement

Even in its own terms, it was an odd line of attack.

The former Home Office minister had argued that trans convicts who had undergone operations should go to the prisons of their new gender. Even if she had been the politician that the Trotskyists imagined, though, who celebrates a sudden death?

Quite a few people, it turns out. Bluesky, a haven for the self-proclaimed #BeKind crowd after Elon Musk bought Twitter, became a cesspit of hatred. ‘No tears here’, ‘Irredeemable monster’, ‘Rest in piss’, ‘The only good Tory…’ etc.

An employee of Aberdeen University is being investigated for posting that she hoped Ms Widdecombe had suffered ‘an extremely painful death’, adding: ‘I hope she was handcuffed to the bed as she screamed in agony.’

Advertisement

(For what it’s worth, I don’t believe that she should face disciplinary action. Coming under pressure from your employer for doing or saying something unrelated to your job is the definition of cancel culture.)

What, though, prompted her to react in such an inhuman way? I don’t use the word ‘inhuman’ lightly. There are moments that prompt us, as social primates, to react in natural ways. We smile at contented babies. We feel a warm glow when people get married. We respond with due solemnity to news of a death. ‘Send not to know for whom the bell tolls’ and all that.

What makes some people respond so differently to the rest of us? And why does it tend to come from one side of the political spectrum?

Yes, you can find unpleasant people espousing all manner of views, but the glorying in the death of opponents is asymmetric.

Advertisement
Police outside the home of former minister Ann Widdecombe on July 11, 2026

Police outside the home of former minister Ann Widdecombe on July 11, 2026

Reform MP Lee Anderson, home affairs spokesman Zia Yusuf and deputy leader Richard Tice pay their respects to Ann Widdecombe near her home

Reform MP Lee Anderson, home affairs spokesman Zia Yusuf and deputy leader Richard Tice pay their respects to Ann Widdecombe near her home

Recall the delirium with which the hard-Left greeted the death of Margaret Thatcher. Trade unions organised festivals. Leftist agitators sold T-shirts declaring ‘Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead!’

Or glance across the Atlantic at grisly celebrations of the sudden death of the Trumpian Senator Lindsey Graham. I was not on Senator Graham’s page politically, but it would not occur to me to explain why, let alone disparage his character. ‘De mortuis nil nisi bonum,’ said the Ancients. If you can’t find nice things to say about the deceased, say nothing.

Advertisement

Why the political one-sidedness? Why is it unimaginable – literally unimaginable – that Rightists will respond to the eventual and (I hope) distant deaths of, say, Gordon Brown or Sir Keir Starmer, as Leftists did to that of Margaret Thatcher?

The short answer was given by the late conservative philosopher Roger Scruton. Conservatives could be friends with socialists, he said, because they simply thought they were mistaken. But socialists struggled to reciprocate, because they thought conservatives were evil.

Most of us know from experience that Scruton was right. But where does this difference originate?

To find an answer, we must plunge into the field of behavioural psychology. Are Leftist brains wired differently from Rightist brains? Does their wiring enable the paradox whereby people who think of themselves as empathetic and inclusive struggle to extend those feelings to their political opponents?

Advertisement

In short, yes. Your political opinions are a lot more emotional than you like to imagine. Two people can look at the same event in very different ways because they are unconsciously primed to see what they want.

Person A sees a brave policeman defending himself from a criminal; person B sees a racist copper abusing his powers.

If I know enough about where you stand on a series of apparently unrelated issues – tax, immigration, abortion – I can make a pretty accurate guess as to whether you will be A or B. Psychologists call it social intuitionism.

What makes Left and Right-wing brains different is that, while conservatives let a series of different intuitions inform their views – concerns for freedom, fairness, sanctity, loyalty and so on – Leftists are driven overwhelmingly by just one, namely sympathy with the underdog.

Advertisement

For them, society is a hierarchical pyramid, and all that matters is backing the group designated as oppressed.

It leads them into all sorts of apparent contradictions. They might favour indigenous rights in Canada or New Zealand while recoiling at the suggestion that ethnic Britons have an equivalent prior claim to the UK. And it causes them real difficulties in understanding the other side.

The social psychologist Jonathan Haidt ran a series of political questionnaires which people were invited to fill in sincerely, and then as they imagined that a typical Leftist and a typical Rightist might. He found that conservatives had no difficulty imagining themselves as socialists, but that the reverse was not true.

Boiled down, the Left-wing take on the world goes something like this: ‘I am a good person. I care about poor people, minorities and underdogs. You disagree with me, so you must dislike all these groups, which makes you a bad person.’

Advertisement

If you have only one moral axis by which to judge things, you struggle to see how someone could want to end poverty and make underdogs better off while disagreeing with you.

If you have read this far, the chances are that you are a conservative. And the chances are also that you will sometimes find your Leftie friends ascribing the blackest of motives to you. Other than giving them Haidt’s 2012 book The Righteous Mind, there is not much you can do.

Still, I keep being struck by one thought. Margaret Thatcher won three elections. Ann Widdecombe was the best known and most popular woman in politics in more recent times.

If they really were as terrible as their detractors claim, what would that say about the country as a whole? Answer me that one, comrades.

Advertisement

Daniel Hannan is Director of the Institute of Economic Affairs

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Northern Ireland Bank Holidays remaining for 2026 after the Twelfth of July

Published

on

Belfast Live

The July Bank Holiday fell on a substitute day this year

With the Twelfth of July Bank Holiday behind us, many people may be curious when their next day off will be.

Advertisement

As the Twelfth fell on a Sunday this year, Monday, July 13 was the substitute Bank Holiday for this year’s celebrations.

NI Direct says: “Bank holidays are holidays when banks and many other businesses are closed for the day. Public Holidays are holidays which have been observed through custom and practice, such as Christmas Day.

“You don’t have a statutory right to paid leave on bank and public holidays, though many people receive the day off work. Any right to time off or extra pay for working on a bank holiday depends on the terms of your contract of employment.”.

Here are the last remaining Bank Holidays for 2026 in Northern Ireland:

Advertisement
  • 31 August – Summer bank holiday
  • 25 DecemberChristmas Day
  • 28 December – Boxing Day (substitute day)

For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our What’s On newsletter

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

QUENTIN LETTS: Her death elicited anguish, affection and humour. All I could feel was a hollowing sorrow

Published

on

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood took an hour of Commons questions about Ann Widdecombe’s murder. All I could feel was a hollowing sorrow

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood took an hour of Commons questions about Ann Widdecombe’s murder. All I could feel was a hollowing sorrow.

Maybe it’s an end-of-summer-term thing and all this hot weather. Maybe it’s because I am getting older and milkier.

Jo Cox, Sir David Amess, now Ann: from my crow’s nest in the gallery I gawp down at these sailors on deck and wonder, horribly, who’ll be next.

‘May she now rest in eternal peace,’ said Ms Mahmood.

Advertisement

From a party often antipathetic to religion, it was a welcome touch. The unexpected reference to Higher Authority, spoken softly at the end of her opening remarks, pricked my eyes a little.

Likewise, Florence Eshalomi (Lab, Vauxhall), churchgoer: ‘May her gentle soul rest in peace.’ A Labour colleague chuckled at this, the idea of Ann as ‘gentle’ perhaps being laughable to strangers. But she could be. She could.

Her death elicited anguish, affection and some humour. Robert Jenrick (Ref, Newark) recalled that on his first day as an MP, then the youngest in the House, Ann peered at him and asked, ‘Are you here on work experience?’

Richard Tice (Ref, Boston) confessed that although she was a foot shorter than him, he always found himself looking up to her. When she telephoned, he would leap to his feet. She liked a dram, too. Mr Tice proposed a limited edition Widders’ Whisky, fiery on the tongue, ‘a blend to be treasured to eternity’.

Advertisement

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood took an hour of Commons questions about Ann Widdecombe’s murder. All I could feel was a hollowing sorrow

As these and other pieces were being said, half-remembered images and sounds flitted across my brow: Ann’s teetering waddle, that Margaret Rutherford bust, her scarlet-varnished forefinger raised mid-oratory.

And the voice. It pinked like a Hillman on bad petrol. Not so much a woman’s larynx as the squawk of a disturbed pheasant, a stick being rattled inside a metal watering can.

Advertisement

She did not just roll her Rs – she played skiffle washboard with them.

In the hunting ban debate years ago she defended foxes from the Tory benches. On all sides sat colleagues, steaming with anger yet powerless in the theatre of the moment.

And then a moment of despair on election night 2017.

We were in a TV studio. After it became clear Theresa May had thrown away her power, London Lefties all around us were crowing about the result.

Advertisement

Ann grabbed hold of me. I felt like a rubber ring in a shipwreck. Such a squeeze. Then off she marched to do battle on air. Responding to her murder, MPs criticised social media for being engines of hatred.

Lee Anderson (Ref, Ashfield) said it was not as simple as that. Sometimes the venom was produced by parliamentarians.

Mr Anderson noted that members of the current Commons had denounced Reform MPs as ‘racists, Nazis, bigots’. What did that do for the political climate? Ms Mahmood said ‘we should show our best selves’.

Mr Jenrick suggested that it had been ‘unwise’ of the Home Office to downgrade security for Nigel Farage.

Advertisement

‘Many will conclude, perhaps unfairly, that it was only because of his political views,’ added Mr Jenrick. Ms Mahmood insisted that the decision was an independent one.

By the way, MPs on all sides defended Speaker Hoyle from accusations, by that little charmer Zia Yusuf, that he has somehow been negligent about MPs’ safety.

Any danger of the session turning too purple was saved by Sir Iain Duncan Smith (Con, Chingford), recalling that in her days as one of John Major’s ministers, Miss Widdecombe was an indignant defender of the pro-EU Maastricht treaty. Yet later she joined Reform!

Lucy Powell, reportedly soon to become deputy PM, insisted she had always ‘admired and respected’ Ann. She concluded: ‘We don’t make them like that any more.’

Advertisement

If that is true, the reason is that politicians have had the verve knocked out of them, not by any fear of violence on their own part as by party managers’ terror of difference.

The gloopy, risk-aversion brigade has been as bad for parliamentary democracy as any mad attacker.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Rangers transfer news: Derek McInnes eyes final summer signings in title bid

Published

on

Belfast Live

Derek McInnes has told Rangers recruitment chief Dan Purdy to target quality attacking wide players as the Ibrox boss looks to complete his summer rebuild ahead of the Scottish Premiership season

Derek McInnes was the first to admit it.

Rangers may have been active in the transfer window this summer, securing six new signings, but as the new Ibrox boss acknowledges himself, there’s “still work to do”. And quite a lot of it.

With just 18 days until the Premiership opener at Tannadice, the clock is ticking to find the missing pieces that will put the Light Blues in contention for silverware this campaign.

Advertisement

McInnes has already acknowledged he may need to take his squad to Tayside for that opening fixture against Jim Goodwin’s Dundee United with a couple of positions yet to be filled.

However, he remains confident he’ll have the squad required to mount a challenge against Celtic and his former Hearts side before the window closes on September 3, reports the Daily Record.

By all accounts, though, Del has worked through the priority checklist he had drawn up for the initial phase of his Rangers rebuild.

As Hearts manager last season, it was McInnes’ responsibility to identify the weaknesses in the Ibrox outfit and find ways to capitalise on them.

Advertisement

It would have been abundantly clear to the then Tynecastle chief that Rangers’ vulnerability lay firmly in their soft underbelly.

Little wonder then that the 55-year-old has made it his primary objective as Gers manager to shore up the Light Blues’ fragile backbone.

The arrivals of goalkeeper Ivor Pandur, defender Ben Godfrey, tenacious midfielders Dan Neil and Cammy Devlin, and versatile player Ross McCrorie – alongside the capture of McInnes’ former Gorgie skipper Lawrence Shankland prior to his own appointment – should guarantee this squad no longer displays the vulnerability that undermined last season’s championship challenge.

He remains in pursuit of a left-sided centre-back, which ought to strengthen matters further.

Advertisement

However, having secured the battlers, McInnes will acknowledge that phase two of his transfer strategy must focus on acquiring the creative talents capable of delivering the genuine quality needed to secure trophies.

Record Sport has learned that recruitment director Dan Purdy has been told McInnes desires significantly superior options in the wide forward positions than currently available, and having only invested a combined transfer fee of approximately £4million to bring in Pandur and McCrorie, he intends to allocate the majority of his remaining funds addressing this concern.

McInnes is also eager to bring in another game-changer in the engine room, with targets including £8.5million-valued Tromso midfielder Jens Hjerto-Dahl, Partizan Belgrade prospect Vanja Dragojevic, and his former Aberdeen lieutenant Lewis Ferguson all featuring prominently on his shortlist.

However, these potential deals may depend on Nico Raskin’s situation.

Advertisement

The Belgian midfielder has put himself squarely in the spotlight following impressive performances for the Red Devils during their journey to the World Cup quarter-finals.

With two years remaining on his Ibrox contract, the timing seems ideal to maximise his rising market value.

However, until Rangers secure funds from any potential sale, it seems chairman Andrew Cavenagh will be hesitant to invest heavily in another central midfielder, particularly given the club’s oversized squad already boasts 10 players who can operate in that position.

That’s why McInnes told journalists who met him at the club’s warm-weather training base in southern Spain over the weekend that his immediate priority is reducing the 28-strong squad he’s currently managing.

While the rest of the squad departed for Alicante, John Souttar and Danilo were permitted to stay in Glasgow as they edge closer to leaving Ibrox.

Jose Cifuentes, Clinton Nsiala and Ross McCausland have been told they have no prospects at the club, while Lyall Cameron must produce something exceptional in the coming weeks to salvage his Rangers career.

Mohamed Diomande, Connor Barron, Nedim Bajrami, Oliver Antman and Bojan Miovski would be wise to explore opportunities elsewhere as McInnes accelerates his squad restructuring.

Advertisement

As for Youssef Chermiti, Rangers have no intention of hastily offloading a player they consider could prove invaluable next season partnering Shankland in attack. Lyon did express interest earlier this summer but were promptly rebuffed after suggesting the former Everton forward was valued at no more than £20million.

By rejecting the French club’s approach, new chief executive Jim Gillespie has sent a clear message that Rangers will no longer be bullied during transfer negotiations as they have been in the past.

His resolve to drive a tough deal is exactly why a comeback for Vaclav Cerny appears improbable, despite reports from Turkish outlets claiming Rangers have had an offer for the Czech winger turned down.

Cerny thoroughly enjoyed his time in Glasgow during his 12-month loan spell under Philippe Clement and subsequently Barry Ferguson.

Advertisement

However, having spent the past year at Turkish heavyweights Besiktas earning a weekly salary of more than £40,000, it’s unlikely Gers will be prepared to match those figures to bring him back permanently.

Sign up to our free sports newsletter to get the latest headlines to your inbox.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

How do you actually pronounce Whorlton in County Durham?

Published

on

How do you actually pronounce Whorlton in County Durham?

Eight letters, two syllables, a place name you might clock on a road sign as you head out of Barnard Castle towards the Tees.

But is the ‘H’ silent or not?

(Image: NORTHERN ECHO)

How do you pronounce it?

Whorlton – the small County Durham village sitting on the north bank of the River Tees, three miles east of Barnard Castle – is pronounced WORL-ton.

The ‘Wh’ is said like a ‘W’, and the ‘h’ in the middle is entirely silent.

Advertisement

Think “wall” followed by “ton”.

WORL-ton.

Simple once you know.

Why does it sound like that?

The answer lies in the name’s age.

Advertisement

Whorlton first appears in written records around 1050, recorded as Queorningtun – an Old English name that most likely means “farmstead by the mill stream”, derived from cweorn, the Old English word for a millstone or mill.

Over a thousand years, spelling and sound drifted apart in the way they so often do with the oldest place names in England, and the written form hardened into something that bears little relation to how locals have always said it.

Other areas

It is a pattern you will recognise across County Durham and the wider North East.

Wolsingham is wol-zing-um, not Wols-ing-ham.

Advertisement

Witton Gilbert is Witton Jill-bert.

Durham itself, to the bafflement of almost every visitor who arrives by train, is Dur-um – not Dur-ham.

The North East has a long tradition of place names that look one way and sound entirely another.

The village itself

Advertisement

Whorlton is the kind of place that rewards the effort of finding it and saying it correctly.

The village overlooks the River Tees from dramatic overhanging cliffs, with the landscape opening out towards the distant hills of the North Pennines.

Whorlton Lido – a much-loved open-air swimming spot nearby – has its own rich local history stretching back through much of the 20th century.

The village’s history goes deeper still.

Advertisement

It appears in the Domesday Book, though by 1428 fewer than ten householders were recorded there, suggesting it was already in long decline even then.

The church of St Mary the Virgin still stands, a quiet reminder of a settlement that once mattered more than its current size suggests.

A short drive away, just across the boundary into North Yorkshire near Swainby, a ruined medieval castle also carries the name – Whorlton Castle.

It is a 12th-century motte and bailey that served successive lords of the manor and played a role in both the Scottish wars and the Civil War.

Advertisement

It is freely accessible and, like the village itself, almost always quiet.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025