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Who won the Makerfield by-election tv debate, Burnham or Kenyon? Plus, have your say

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Who won the Makerfield by-election tv debate, Burnham or Kenyon? Plus, have your say

John Rentoul, chief political commentator – “The cat’s out the bag … Andy is finally making this about No 10”

However hard the BBC and some of the panellists pretended, it was all about Andy Burnham. Some of it was about Burnham versus Robert Kenyon, the Reform candidate, as they competed to present themselves as Westminster outsiders – “normal people” in Kenyon’s phrase – wanting to go “down to London” to give Makerfield a fair deal.

Even that head-to-head was lop-sided, though, because of what Jake Austin, the Liberal Democratic candidate, said was the reason for the by-election, which is “about electing a prime minister by the back door”. Austin said this was “not the right way to be doing politics”, but what was interesting was that this divided the audience – some of them agreed, but most seemed to be quite happy to have their constituency used as a launch pad for the highest office.

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Burnham himself dodged the question twice with his usual formula of wanting to take it to the “highest possible” level – if he is lucky enough to be elected – but then he cracked and said that Wes Streeting seems to have started a leadership contest already and “I would seek to join it”. His supporters in the audience cheered even as he tried to qualify it by saying he would have to persuade MPs to nominate him.

With that cat out of the bag, the two main candidates – the would-be prime minister and the plumber, the true outsider – could get on with discussing the main issue of the day, namely alleged two-tier policing. Kenyon went with public opinion, which thinks that the police are biased in favour of ethnic minorities, while Burnham went for the big tent, praising Michael Winstanley, the Conservative candidate, and Kemi Badenoch, his leader, for “speaking really well” on the subject.

In the end, Burnham came across as a regular guy, admitted he was ambitious and didn’t make any mistakes. That made him the winner.

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Kate Devlin, Whitehall editor – “Both men appeared to be speaking to two different audiences”

The headlines from this encounter will be that Andy Burnham finally confirmed he will challenge Keir Starmer for the keys to No 10. He could hardly deny it, as the people of Makerfield weigh up whether to vote for the man who will potentially be the country’s next prime minister. He managed to walk a difficult line between focusing on local issues and a wider vision for Britain. He also managed to neatly answer some difficult questions.

In the wake of 18-year-old Henry Nowak’s death – the student was ignored by police officers when he told them he had been stabbed, and died while being arrested and handcuffed after his killer, Vickrum Digwa, 23, falsely claimed he had been the victim of a racist attack – he pointed to his relationship with the local police chief, who, he said, wanted to “make sure the police were seen as neutral, serving all communities, and therefore I backed him”. He also said there was a case to “look again” at the carrying of knives for religious reasons.

But he added “it needs a very careful debate”. Reform’s Robert Kenyon looked relaxed in his first outing on the national stage, but faced a difficult time from some members of the audience, including one who told him: “I’d rather have a career politician than a plumber who is a sexist”. While both men are battling for the same votes, in the same seat, they appeared to be speaking to two different audiences. Andy Burnham was the clear winner tonight, but it will count for nothing if he fails to win this by-election.

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Sean O’Grady, associate editor – “Andy Burnham was unconvincing on ever level … poor old Makerfield”

For me the “Great Makerfield Debate” was all over when a plainly exasperated woman in the audience declared: “I’d rather have a career politician than a sexist plumber” for her next MP. Me too. And, to avoid the ultimate catastrophe of Reform UK and Nigel Farage regaining lost momentum, I’d vote for Andy Burnham. Reluctantly. He was unconvincing on every level, notably when he said he’d left Westminster in 2017 so he could work for the people as mayor of Greater Manchester. In reality it was because he saw no future for himself under Jeremy Corbyn. He was, is, and always will be a careerist – and should admit it.

As for Kenyon, he did at least disagree with Farage and condemned the violence in Southampton; but he couldn’t escape the wrath of Carol Vorderman. The nice Green candidate, Sarah Wakefield, told him Carol was watching at home and expecting an apology, and Kenyon looked like he’d dropped his best spanner down a U-bend. In the normal democracy we used to be, Micheal Winstanley (Tory) or Jake Austin (Lib Dem), both obviously decent folk, would walk this contest. But they’ll lose their deposits. Poor old Makerfield.

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Psychologist to open Durham Wellness Space in Coxhoe

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Psychologist to open Durham Wellness Space in Coxhoe

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Pentagon drops 180 religions from its recognized faiths list

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Pentagon drops 180 religions from its recognized faiths list

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

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

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

The Independent has contacted the Pentagon for comment.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Inquest opens into death of Trimdon mother Eloise Whittleton

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Inquest opens into death of Trimdon mother Eloise Whittleton

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Eloise’s funeral flowers (Image: FAMILY)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Manchester Evening News

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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It did not quite work out that way.

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

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

Kenyon’s answer was more straightforward.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“Violence is not the answer,” he said.

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

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

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

Then came the moment everybody had been waiting for.

Would he challenge for the Labour leadership?

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

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

It was not quite a campaign launch.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Nintendo Switch 2 is a year old today and we still don’t know what to make of it

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Nintendo Switch 2 is a year old today and we still don’t know what to make of it
Happy birthday Switch 2 (Nintendo)

As the Switch 2 celebrates its first birthday, GameCentral looks back at the highs and lows of Nintendo’s most recent console and tries to predict where it goes from here.

Since the internet, and the real world beyond it, increasingly only deals in extremes it’s difficult to talk about the Switch 2 in any kind of nuanced fashion. It is neither the best thing ever nor the worst and determining exactly where it sits along that gradient is not easy. Today is its first anniversary, which is slightly awkward as there’s reason to hope there’ll be a major Nintendo Direct next week which will, possibly, answer some of the questions we’re about to pose.

Looking at the console with the benefit of 365 days of hindsight, we’d say that that the hardware itself was largely faultless. The design hasn’t changed much, of course, and it could do with a longer battery life and maybe a better screen, but for the price it’s almost perfect, with the click of the magnetic Joy-Cons still seeming magical to this day.

It’s still baffling that Nintendo has made no attempt whatsoever to demonstrate the power of the console – we didn’t get so much as a tech demo pre-launch – but multiple third party games have made it clear it’s far more powerful than you would expect, with excellent versions of everything from Resident Evil Requiem and Cyberpunk 2077 to Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth and Star Wars Outlaws.

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The remake of Star Fox 64 does seem to be a step up, in terms of technical prowess, but other upcoming games, like Splatoon Raiders and Fire Emblem: Fortune’s Weave, still look like Wii U games. Nintendo games are rarely sold on their graphics, but the Switch 2 clearly has raw power to spare and yet it’s not being used – one of many strange decisions orbiting the console.

Ever since the unveiling of the console and its games in April last year, it’s seemed as if Nintendo was only showing and doing the bare minimum. Despite having eight years to prepare, and no deadline to meet in terms of when the console had to be released, everything to do with the Switch 2 has felt hurried and poorly thought out, like a student who was out partying the night before their big report was due and only just scrabbled together what they needed.

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That impression has not changed over the last 12 months, but it has morphed into an industry default for most publishers who, in their wisdom, have decided that it’s best to have as little to look forward to as possible and to know as little about what is announced as can be contrived.

That logic obviously makes sense to someone, somewhere, because it’s taken deep root within so many different publishers, but Nintendo has taken it to an absurd extreme, to the point where it’s now June and we haven’t had a single large scale, first party Nintendo Direct all year. That in turn means we have no idea about anything coming out after July (except that supposedly Fortune’s Weave and FromSoftware’s The Duskbloods will be along at some point, if they haven’t been delayed).

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At exactly the point where a first party Direct would seem the most useful to both Nintendo and its customers – considering a price rise is on the horizon – they’ve decided to say less about their future plans than they ever have before.

This seems to be in large part because of the industry wide problem of games costing too much, and taking too long, to make. The Switch 2 may be impressively powerful, but Nintendo’s not used to working with that kind of hardware and that’s no doubt part of the reason behind some of their stranger decisions.

Mario Kart World gameplay of Mario and Bowser driving go karts in the Bob-omb Blast mode
Mario Kart World – a good game but not a classic (Nintendo)

We had hoped, before the Switch 2 became a reality, that Nintendo, who have always benefited from keeping a tight rein on their budgets, would cope better than most with the issue, or demonstrate some new way of avoiding it, but sadly that hasn’t happened.

Instead, the software line-up has been a strange mixture of A-listers and deeply underwhelming lower budget games. Mario Kart World as a launch game makes perfect sense, but the strange way the open world was handled – which was exacerbated by the misleading marketing – left a bad taste in the mouth of many fans. While the continued lack of any DLC at all (why does Donkey Kong only have one extra costume?) is impossible to explain.

Mario Kart World is a good game, and Donkey Kong Bananza is even better, but in hindsight the latter would’ve made a much better Christmas release, rather than having the line-up fizzle out with the deeply disappointing Metroid Prime 4. You can see the sense of releasing Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment early on, because it meant at least some kind of new Zelda game was available, but surely there was a better choice than yet another brain dead Dynasty Warriors knock-off.

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Kirby Air Riders does have its fans, even if we’re not amongst them, but why did Nintendo feel it was so important to release a second cartoon racing game within the launch window? Especially one that was only ever going to be popular in Japan. They did later admit that they’d focused too much on games for their home audience, but surely Nintendo has been in the business long enough not to make that mistake in the first place?

There are many other strange decisions beyond that, including the highly experimental Drag x Drive, which might have been a cult hit if hadn’t been so utterly devoid of content that you could see all there was to see within a couple of hours. Does Nintendo really not employ enough people that they couldn’t have whisked up a quick single-player mode or a proper tournament structure? Or, you know, used any colour other than dark grey for the graphics.

Why did the marketing for Yoshi And the Mysterious Book make it seem like a game for pre-schoolers when it’s actually one of the most inventive and open-ended platformers Nintendo has put out for years, and much better suited to adult players than anyone else.

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Pokémon Pokopia screenshot of Ditto falling
Pokémon Pokopia is the best first party Switch 2 game (The Pokémon Company)

And how is it that of all the games Nintendo has released in the last year a Minecraft clone by the makers of Hyrule Warriors turned out to be the most compelling? That certainly wasn’t on our bingo card and it clearly wasn’t on Nintendo’s either, who were caught out by the success of Pokémon Pokopia and have been scrambling to leverage it ever since.

One of the most encouraging annoucement this year (not that there have been many of any type) was the reveal of Pokémon Winds and Waves, which does look like a generational leap from Scarlet and Violet. Having that next year does seem a useful anchor but the overriding problem with the Switch 2’s line-up is the mystifying logic behind how Nintendo has been prioritising its various franchises.

Kirby Air Riders is one thing but why on earth is Star Fox deemed so important all of a sudden, such that it was shore-horned into the Mario Galaxy movie, of all things? A decision that takes on reality-bending levels of bizarreness when you realise that Nintendo hasn’t yet breathed a word about a new Super Mario game since before the Switch 2 was announced.

Why are we a year in and there’s still no sign of Splatoon 4 and instead it has to wait in the queue behind a primarily single-player spin-off? And why was a new Fire Emblem announced so early on when we still haven’t heard anything about far more mainstream games, like a new Animal Crossing?

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Not furnishing Mario Kart World with constant updates is one thing but we felt sure that the reason support for Animal Crossing: New Horizons – the breakout hit of the entire franchise – was cut short was so the team could get a new game ready for early on in the Switch 2’s career, so that it could benefit from new content throughout the whole of the console’s life. But instead Nintendo announced a Switch 2 Edition that adds almost nothing of note and implies a new game is several years away.

Nintendo not making sense might seem like their natural state of being, but in reality everything they do is perfectly logical, from their point of view, and only becomes so to others over time. The Switch 2 has been stretching credulity since the beginning though, to the point where everything feels like they switched to Plan B sometime in 2024 and they’ve been on that track ever since.

Animal Crossing characters
Why was a new Animal Crossing not a priority? (Nintendo)

Even if sales at Christmas were less than hoped for, the Switch 2 is still the fastest-selling console of all-time and well ahead of where the Switch was at the same time in its lifetime. But you could tell the Switch 1 was special before its first Christmas, with a GOAT launch window line-up that Switch 2 hasn’t come close to matching.

The changing nature of game development may make the Switch 1’s achievements impossible to repeat (especially given the boost it got from being able to use Wii U ports to fill gaps in its schedule and provide a cast iron classic of a launch title) but that still makes it impossible not to be at least a little disappointed with the Switch 2.

We’ve long ago learnt not to try and predict Nintendo, or believe any rumours about them, even if the one about a Zelda: Ocarina Of Time remake is very persistent. Who knows what they’ll announce next week, if there even is a Direct next week, but while we’d welcome a modernised version of Ocarina Of Time as much as anyone, what we really crave is something new, in terms of both IP and gameplay ideas.

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Nintendo always delivers eventually but they’ve certainly not made it easy waiting for that to happen with the Switch 2, which continues to be a great console supported by a merely good games line-up. Other publishers would be happy with far less but the problem with Nintendo’s reputation is that they’ve trained people to always expect the best thing ever, and this time that hasn’t happened. Or at least not yet.

The Legend Of Zelda: Ocarina Of Time artwork of Link and main characters
Maybe the Ocarina Of Time rumours are true or maybe they’re not (Nintendo)

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Lanarkshire school pupils recognised for developing skills that employers value

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Daily Record

Strathaven Academy’s Fergus Wood was one of the youngsters who received the Ken Muir Award for Exceptional Achievement.

A group of S5 and S6 pupils from Lanarkshire have received recognition for developing the skills Scotland’s employers value most.

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They excelled in teamwork, communication and problem-solving and picked up a national Ken Muir Award for Exceptional Achievement.

Five youngsters from Calderglen High in East Kilbride, St Maurice’s High in Cumbernauld, St John Ogilvie High in Hamilton and Strathaven Academy were selected as part of a Scotland-wide cohort in recognition of the “remarkable personal growth, resilience and workplace-readiness” they demonstrated whilst completing the Powering Futures Challenge Programme – a SCQF Level-6 qualification which sees pupils work in teams to tackle real-life challenges set by business and industry partners. Through the programme, pupils develop practical workplace skills while strengthening links with locally-based mentors working in Scottish businesses.

While over 2000 pupils nationally undertook the Powering Futures Schools Challenge Qualification, the Lanarkshire award winners impressed their teachers with their personal development throughout the programme – and were recognised for growing in confidence, strengthening their teamwork and communication skills and taking meaningful steps towards their future careers.

Fergus Wood of Strathaven Academy was one of the award winners and was nominated for his dedication and drive throughout the entire year, but especially during the final presentation phase. Beyond keeping his team focused anon schedule, Fergus demonstrated remarkable growth in his meta-skills. His newfound confidence and natural leadership not only elevated his own performance but were instrumental to his team’s success.

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The Ken Muir Awards for Exceptional Achievement were launched in June 2025 and recognise exceptional achievement of learners who participated in the Powering Futures Challenge Level 6 qualification.

Professor Ken Muir of the University of the West of Scotland – after whom the awards are named – has played a key role in advising the Scottish Government on the future of Scottish education. As a key contributor to the 2023 report, It’s Our Future – Independent Review of Qualifications and Assessment, Professor Muir has called for reforms to Scotland’s system of education, including preparing learners better for the world of work.

Professor Muir said: “We need a culture and mindset shift in Scotland’s education system. Of course, examination grades are important – but these awards, and the ethos of the Powering Futures Schools Challenge Programme overall, is about reimagining what success looks like by valuing and recognising achievement in every sense of the word.

“Whether that is developing communication skills, learning to work in a team, or building confidence in presenting an idea, I am delighted to present these Awards to pupils who demonstrate the immense value of Powering Futures’ exciting and motivating learner-centred approach.”

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Jennifer Tempany, co-founder of Powering Futures, said: “We are delighted to celebrate this year’s Ken Muir Award winners, recognising the immense personal growth and achievement they have demonstrated this academic year.

“By connecting these young people directly with Scottish business and industry through a hands-on approach, we are not only celebrating their success but actively opening up vital career pathways and empowering them to confidently shape a sustainable and prosperous future for Scotland.”

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Work to refurbish part of local bus station set to begin

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Wales Online

It will be funded through its public realm programme

Works by Bridgend County Borough Council to refurbish parts of a local bus station have begun.

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The project will see improvements made to the clock tower at Bridgend’s town centre bus station over the coming weeks with the site now set to be re-rendered and refreshed.

The work will be funded through the council’s public realm programme and is expected to last for around four weeks in June. Stay in the know by making sure you’re receiving our daily newsletter.

It will be carried out with the aim of improving the appearance of what has been described as one of the “main gateways” into the borough.

A council spokesman said: “The refurbishment forms part of ongoing investment in public spaces across the county borough aimed at creating cleaner, more welcoming environments for residents, visitors, and commuters.

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“To allow the works to be carried out safely some temporary changes will be introduced at the bus station.

“The outside footpath serving bays one to eight will be closed for the duration of the works.

“During normal opening hours passengers will still be able to access the bays from inside the bus station building.

“After the bus station closes each evening services that would normally use bays one to eight will instead operate from bays nine to 11 located outside the main building near the bus station entrance.

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“These temporary arrangements will apply after 6pm from Monday to Saturda, and after 4pm on Sundays.”

Councillor Gary Haines of Aberkenfig added: “Bridgend Bus Station is one of the first places many people see when arriving in the town centre so it is important that it creates a positive first impression.”

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Solent Freeport joins forces with Solent Growth Partnership to launch new apprenticeship incentive programme

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Solent Freeport joins forces with Solent Growth Partnership to launch new apprenticeship incentive programme

Solent Freeport has launched a new £50,000 Apprenticeship Incentive Programme in partnership with the Solent Growth Partnership, helping small and medium-sized businesses invest in future talent while creating new pathways into skilled employment for young people across the region.

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Pam Bondi puts Todd Blanche on the hook for ‘entire release’ of the Epstein files, transcript reveals

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Pam Bondi puts Todd Blanche on the hook for ‘entire release’ of the Epstein files, transcript reveals

Former Attorney General Pam Bondi said “I don’t recall” at least 34 times during her closed-door interview with members of Congress investigating Jeffrey Epstein, a transcript of the meeting reveals.

Bondi, who was fired by Donald Trump in April, repeatedly told the House Oversight Committee that her deputy Todd Blanche was “in charge” of the “entire release” of the so-called Epstein files, a chaotic document dump of millions of pages and images stemming from the federal government’s investigations into the dead sex offender.

She also sought to get ahead of any allegations that she was “placing blame” on her successor at the Department of Justice and offered a full-throated endorsement of his position as acting attorney general.

“Todd Blanche is one of the most highly ethical individuals I know, and I think he is making an incredible Acting Attorney General. And he managed this investigation — and it was a Herculean task — with very little error,” she said, according to a transcript of her interview released Thursday. “And Todd did an excellent job, in my opinion, and is doing an excellent job as our Attorney General. I’m not blaming anything on Todd.”

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But Bondi — who faced intense bipartisan scrutiny for the Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein files — repeatedly said she could not remember significant details when it came to questions about survivors, redactions in the documents, and the Justice Department’s work on the case while she was in office.

Pam Bondi said Todd Blanche was ‘in charge’ of the ‘entire release’ of the Epstein files during her interview with the House Oversight Committee
Pam Bondi said Todd Blanche was ‘in charge’ of the ‘entire release’ of the Epstein files during her interview with the House Oversight Committee (AP)

She also said she could not recall whether the Justice Department ever investigated high-profile administration figures, including Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, about their ties to Epstein, or if the Justice Department was investigating lawmakers who searched for the president’s name in unredacted copies of the files that have been made available to them.

Bondi claimed that she only learned about a controversial prison transfer for Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell after she had been moved to a minimum-security prison following her jailhouse interview with Blanche last summer.

Maxwell, she said, “should die in prison.”

“She was a monster, just like Jeffrey Epstein,” she said. “She recruited these young women to a life of prostitution and abuse. And I often think the women that do that are just as bad, if not worse, than the men, because she participated in it.”

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A transcript of the closed-door meeting reveals the former attorney general said ‘I don’t recall’ at least 34 times when questioned about critical parts of the government’s investigation into Epstein and the release of the files
A transcript of the closed-door meeting reveals the former attorney general said ‘I don’t recall’ at least 34 times when questioned about critical parts of the government’s investigation into Epstein and the release of the files (Getty)

Blanche, the president’s former criminal defense attorney now poised to be formally nominated for attorney general, “was in charge of the process and the entire release of the Epstein files,” Bondi said.

The Justice Department has released approximately 3 million files following legislation passed by Congress and signed by Trump that compelled their release.

But lawmakers asked Bondi why another 3 million documents still have not been released, sparking allegations of a government-wide cover up to protect powerful public figures accused of exploiting and abusing young women and girls

“To my knowledge, they’ve all been released,” Bondi said.

The release of the files and bipartisan pressure to investigate figures in Epstein’s orbit erupted into a massive political liability for the president and his allies, and the president removed Bondi from her post days before she was initially scheduled to testify to the committee.

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The Justice Department sought to block her appearance after she left office, though she later agreed to participate in a closed-door, transcribed interview on May 29 after threats from Democratic lawmakers to hold her in contempt for defying a bipartisan subpoena.

Blanche, who is Trump’s former criminal defense attorney, is expected to be formally nominated as the next attorney general
Blanche, who is Trump’s former criminal defense attorney, is expected to be formally nominated as the next attorney general (Getty)

During her sworn testimony to the House Judiciary Committee in February, Bondi repeatedly deflected questions about Epstein to talk about the stock market and chastised Democrats who questioned her.

“The Dow is over 50,000 right now,” she said after she was questioned about potential indictments against Epstein’s co-conspirators.

The Nasdaq is “smashing records” and Americans’ retirement accounts are “booming,” she said. “That’s what we should be talking about.”

After last week’s interview, Epstein survivor Maria Farmer said Bondi’s “continued evasion of questions about her grave mishandling of the release of the Epstein files was not surprising — it’s a pattern of behavior.”

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“At every turn, Bondi has ignored and disregarded the will of Epstein survivors who have waited for justice for decades and even now, as a private citizen, she refuses responsibility for her missteps and failures,” Farmer said in a statement shared with The Independent.

On Thursday, the Republican-led committee referred former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine and hairstylist Frédéric Fekkai to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution.

The referral follows the committee’s interview with Epstein’s former assistant Sarah Kellen on May 21. In their letter Blanche, Comer and four other House Republicans urged the Justice Department to use “all available tools” — including providing “immunity for certain witnesses” — to investigate Kellen’s allegations.

Lauren Hersh, co-founder and CEO of World Without Exploitation, which represents Epstein survivors, called the letter an “important step” in the investigation.

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“It provides further proof that there are clear investigative leads in the files and underscores the importance of continued transparency, accountability, and a thorough review of all available evidence,” she said.

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Conflict over identity politics could lead to civil war in the long term, Kemi Badenoch says

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Conflict over identity politics could lead to civil war in the long term, Kemi Badenoch says

Speaking to the BBC for the documentary before the sentencing of Nowak’s killer Vickrum Digwa, Badenoch said: “This is not a racist country. But now we are seeing more and more hostility to people of every ethnicity, whether they’re English or not English, because people are bringing political conflict into an area where we didn’t have political conflict.

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