NewsBeat
Police chiefs call on ministers to guarantee funding
Police chiefs have warned the home secretary that without further funding neighbourhood police officers – a government priority – could be cut.
Nearly a quarter of police forces in England and Wales have called on Yvette Cooper to underwrite the costs of pay rises and higher employer taxes when details of their funding are announced early next week.
Some are facing budget deficits of £10m or more, and the chief constable of Lincolnshire Police has told the BBC the jobs of a third of his officers could be at risk, jeopardising the force’s viability.
A Home Office spokesperson said the police funding settlement for next year would “cover the annual pay award in full and give forces more money to recruit officers and keep our streets safe”.
The home secretary had confirmed that forces would be “fully compensated” for the changes to employer National Insurance contributions, the spokesperson added.
In a recent speech, Yvette Cooper announced police spending in England and Wales would increase by more than £500m, which included £100m to pay for 13,000 more neighbourhood officers and £260m for additional tax and pay costs.
But since then, some police chiefs have warned they still face deep cuts and have questioned whether the additional funding will continue beyond this year.
Sir Mark Rowley, the commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Britain’s biggest force, has warned that 2,300 officers and 400 other staff may have to go.
Chief constables have been given extra money in recent years to fund what the Conservatives called an “uplift” in police numbers. This largely restored the number of staff to previous levels, following cuts made during the austerity of the 2010-2015 coalition government.
However, some forces say they are now struggling to maintain government-prescribed minimum officer levels. If they drop below the minimum, they lose some funding.
Police areas around the country have dug deep into reserves and many have sold off property to protect frontline staff.
The BBC has been told that police forces who have either written or contacted the home secretary to ask for help include:
- Lincolnshire Police, the worst-funded force in the country per head, which risks having to shed 400 of its 1,100 officers, according to its chief constable
- Essex Police, with a £10m potential deficit, and warning of cutting 200 officers, losing valuable experience in neighbourhoods
- Essex, Cambridgeshire, Suffolk and Hertfordshire have sent a joint letter to the Home Office warning of cuts
- Norfolk and Bedfordshire, who have made separate representations.
The Metropolitan Police, the largest police force in the country, which also covers national responsibilities such as counter-terrorism, faces a potential deficit of £450m.
The government is expected to announce funding for each force next week, but senior officers are questioning whether the money available will be based on the actual deficits they face or the funding formula which determines more broadly how much each force receives.
Home Office officials insist the actual bill for higher taxes and pay will be met for the next year.
The government has not yet committed itself to reforming the funding formula.
This was devised in 2006 and some forces say it is now out of date. Changing crime patterns and growing populations have resulted in them struggling to maintain funding levels.
Lincolnshire has seen its population increase by 13% in the last 20 years, and said funding had not kept up.
Chief Constable Paul Gibson said that to maintain current operations, the force would need an extra £57m over the next three and a half years.
If the government did not help, he said, “I would need to be taking maybe more than 400 police officers and police staff out of the organisation.”
Lincolnshire currently employs 1,189 officers.
“At what point does a police force lose its viability?” he asked. “We’ve got very good people who do good things with the resources they have at their disposal and I’m hugely supportive of that.
“But the bottom line is we can’t police on a shoestring.”
The county’s Conservative police and crime commissioner, Marc Jones, said officers had to travel long distances between towns to transport suspects because of a lack of custody suites and, with one of the biggest rural road networks, police units struggle to prevent high levels of traffic deaths and injuries.
Lincolnshire has around 60 neighbourhood officers covering 2,500 square miles. Grimsby, policed by neighbouring Humberside, has the same number of officers for a single town.
“It’s outrageous that our next-door neighbour can put as many neighbourhood police officers in one town as we can deploy across our whole county,” Mr Jones said, adding “that is not sustainable”.
Chief Constable Gibson said the funding issue was so stark, all of the county’s 60 neighbourhood officers could be at risk, which he argued would turn Lincolnshire into a purely “reactive” force.
He rejected the suggestion the force could find more savings. In recent years Lincolnshire has replaced police helicopters with drones, moved gun licensing online, and introduced mobile fingerprint units in an attempt to save money.
Rethinking the 2006 police funding formula could bring Lincolnshire an extra 10% to 12% more cash.
But better funded forces would lose money, creating a difficult political challenge for the government, so a new formula remains on the shelf.
A further funding announcement for future years is expected in April, and officials have indicated they might consider updating the funding formula.
The government is working on plans to improve the way police forces buy equipment and services, and to help forces share resources.
Officials say this will help forces balance budgets and improve services.
NewsBeat
UK’s plutonium to be readied for disposal
Science correspondent, BBC News
The government says it will dispose of its 140 tonnes of radioactive plutonium – currently stored at a secure facility at Sellafield in Cumbria.
The UK has the world’s largest stockpile of the hazardous material, which is a product of nuclear fuel reprocessing.
It has been kept at the site and has been piling up for decades in a form that would allow it to be recycled into new nuclear fuel.
But the government has now decided that it will not be reused and instead says it wants to put the hazardous material “beyond reach” and made ready for permanent disposal deep underground.
When spent nuclear fuel is separated it into its component parts, one of the products is plutonium.
Successive governments have kept the material to leave open the option to recycle it into new nuclear fuel.
Storing this highly radioactive material – in its current form – is expensive and difficult. It needs to be frequently repackaged, because radiation damages the containers it’s kept in. And it’s guarded by armed police. All that costs the taxpayer more than £70m per year.
The government has made the decision that the safest – most economically viable solution – is to “immobilise” its entire plutonium stockpile.
That means that a facility will be built at Sellafield where the plutonium can be converted into a stable, rock-like material, which can eventually be disposed of deep underground.
In a statement, energy minister Michael Shanks said the objective was “to put this material beyond reach, into a form which both reduces the long-term safety and security burden during storage and ensures it is suitable for disposal”.
Nuclear materials scientist Dr Lewis Blackburn from the University of Sheffield said the plutonium would be “converted into a ceramic material” which, while still radioactive, is solid and stable so it is deemed safe to dispose of.
“The type of ceramic remains to be decided [and selecting the right material] is the subject of ongoing research.”
Nuclear waste expert Prof Claire Corkhill from the University of Bristol said the goverment’s decision was a “positive step”.
She told BBC News that it paved the way to removing the cost and hazard of storing plutonium at Sellafield “by transforming it and locking it away into a solid, durable material that will last for millions of years in a geological disposal facility”.
“These materials are based on those we find in nature – natural minerals, that we know have contained uranium for billions of years.”
The government is currently in the early stages of a long technical and political process of choosing a suitable site to build a deep geological facility that will eventually be the destination for all of the country’s most hazardous radioactive waste. That facility will not be operational until at least 2050.
NewsBeat
Trump revokes Covid adviser Anthony Fauci’s security protection
President Donald Trump has revoked security protection for former top US health official Anthony Fauci, who has faced death threats since leading the country’s Covid-19 response.
“You can’t have a security detail for the rest of your life because you work for government,” Trump told reporters, when asked about the decision on Friday. “It’s very standard.”
This week, Trump also revoked security protections for his former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, his former National Security Adviser John Bolton and former envoy Brian Hook, who all faced threats from Iran.
Dr Fauci has now hired his own private security team that he will pay for himself, US media report.
Asked whether he felt responsible for the officials’ safety, Trump said on Friday: “They all made a lot of money. They can hire their own security too.”
Dr Fauci was previously protected by federal marshals, and then a private security company, which was paid for by the government, according to the New York Times.
One of Dr Fauci’s most vocal Republican critics, Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, had called for his security to be revoked.
He wrote in a post on X on Thursday that he had “sent supporting information to end the 24 hr a day limo and security detail for Fauci”.
“I wish him nothing but peace but he needs to pay for his own limos,” he said.
Trump has also revoked the security clearances of 51 intelligence officials who had claimed that Hunter Biden’s laptop had “all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.”
Under US protocol, former presidents and their spouses are granted security protection for life. But protection for other US officials is decided based on the threat assessment from the intelligence community.
As the former head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr Fauci faced death threats during and after the coronavirus pandemic, as well as criticism from Republicans over mask mandates and other Covid restrictions.
He led the institute for 40 years, including during Trump’s first term. Trump had also awarded presidential commendations to Dr Fauci who served on the Operation Warp Speed task force during the pandemic.
Before leaving office, then-President Joe Biden issued a preemptive pardon for Dr Fauci.
The doctor told US media that he “truly appreciated” Biden for taking action, adding that the possibility of prosecution had created “immeasurable and intolerable distress” on his family.
“Let me be perfectly clear, I have committed no crime and there are no possible grounds for any allegation or threat of criminal investigation or prosecution of me,” he said.
NewsBeat
‘Vile’ policeman Samuel McGregor found guilty of rape – leaving senior officer ‘sickened’ | UK News
A “vile” policeman has been convicted of rape – leaving a senior officer “sickened” by his “abhorrent behaviour”.
PC Samuel McGregor, who previously worked at the Metropolitan Police‘s Central North command unit, was found guilty on Friday after a trial at Inner London Crown Court.
The 33-year-old officer had previously pleaded not guilty in June 2023.
The court heard the victim, who was known to the defendant, was raped on 11 May 2021 at an address in London.
She later told her colleagues about the incident, and they reported it to officers on the victim’s behalf on 2 June 2021.
McGregor was arrested the next day on suspicion of rape.
Chief Superintendent Andy Carter, who heads policing for Central North, said: “I am sickened by McGregor’s abhorrent behaviour and the pain he has caused the victim.
“There is simply no place for individuals like McGregor in the Met, and we will continue to root out such vile individuals.”
He added that he hoped the court’s guilty verdict “brings some closure to the victim”.
Read more from Sky News:
Mum jailed after sons died in fire while she was shopping
Grandson of pie company tycoon jailed over murder of friend
McGregor is set to be sentenced on 10 March.
A misconduct hearing will take place in due course.
McGregor was suspended from duty on 3 March 2022 after he admitted lying during a police interview.
Politics
Sadiq Khan accused of ‘running down clock’ as Mayor pressed on grooming gangs
Sadiq Khan has been accused of “running down the clock” when pressed on grooming gangs in a London Assembly meeting.
The London Mayor was asked if he would guarantee some funding for police investigations into the grooming gangs scandal.
Khan said: “Firstly it’s really important when you have a conversation of this nature that you think about the victims of child sexual exploitation.”
Pressed by Susan Hall, a former London mayoral candidate, Khan said that he was “really surprised” that Hall “did not know how operational independence works” for the police.
Sadiq Khan has been accused of ‘running down the clock’ when pressed on grooming gangs in a London Assembly meeting
London Assembly
Noting that she was “on a clock”, she had asked the mayor for a “yes or no” answer.
Susan Hall AM, City Hall Conservatives Crime spokesperson, said: “Yet again Sadiq has failed to answer the important questions put to him about the issues that matter to London.”
She added: “Starmer tells us local inquires are the way forward but cowardly Sadiq can’t commit to funding one, and instead cynically tries to run down the clock on the time we have to ask him questions in order to avoid answering.
“It’s a disgrace, and an insult to the victims that despite every opportunity we get to push for justice, the Mayor continues to run and hide, for shame.”
The mayor’s office was contacted for comment.
NewsBeat
Edinburgh becomes first ‘tourist tax’ city in Scotland
BBC Scotland
Visitors to Edinburgh will be charged a tourist tax designed to raise £50m annually, after city councillors voted in favour of the move.
The charge, which mimics those already used in Germany, Spain and Italy, covers hotels, bed and breakfasts, self-catering accommodation as well as rooms and properties let through websites like Airbnb.
City of Edinburgh Council has said the levy of 5% will take effect from 24 July 2026 and the revenue raised will be spent on infrastructure improvements.
But some businesses are concerned that it will put visitors off visiting the city and that it is being rushed in before systems are ready.
Council leader Jane Meagher said it was one of the most important injections of funding in the city for decades, and visitors and residents would quickly see the benefits.
“They will see cleaner streets, they will see quicker removal of graffiti, better environmental improvements, more attractive spaces and better transport connections,” she said.
“They will see lots of improvements across the city, not just in the city centre.”
She added some of the money would go towards affordable housing, to enable people working in the city to find somewhere to live.
“We’re getting strong messages from employers in the hospitality sector that they’re struggling to recruit people to jobs because rents and mortgages are so high and they can’t afford to live near where they work,” she said.
However, there are concerns from some in the business community who say it will mean more administration for them.
Anna Morris, who runs a short-term let in the Newington area of the city, is also concerned it could put people off coming to Edinburgh.
“I think there is a risk that it does affect the competitiveness of Edinburgh as a destination,” she said.
“It is quite an expensive destination already. I love Edinburgh, It’s a brilliant place to come but people can go wherever they want – abroad and even within Scotland, there are other cities you might choose to go to.
“Everyone is watching what they spend now, and [the tax] is quite high when you think about it so there is a risk there.”
But other European cities where a tourist tax has been introduced – such as Amsterdam – say they have not lost visitors and have seen many benefits.
The Dutch capital now charges 12.5% on top of accommodation bills, raising 265m Euros (£220m) a year.
The deputy mayor Hester van Buren said: “The residents are more tolerant of the tourists because they think they’ve contributed, and that there are also benefits from the tourists.
“We can clean the city, we can build more infrastructure, we can put money into more affordable housing for the residents so I hope the residents see the profit of it.”
One of the areas hoping to benefit from any levy is Edinburgh’s only city centre housing scheme, Dumbiedykes.
Jim Slaven, who has been a tenant there for 30 years, said many of the flats were now short-term lets and they lost amenities such as their community centre and shops.
“Housing is one of the major crises in the city and has been in working class areas for many years,” he said.
“For years the residents of Edinburgh have been told how many hundreds of millions of pounds come into the city through tourism, so with the visitors’ levy it’s an opportunity for some money from tourism to be put into public services and infrastructure.”
NewsBeat
My songs are as real as it gets
Culture reporter
South London singer Lola Young’s unflinchingly honest hit Messy has reached number one in the UK after a two-month climb, and she’s been nominated for a Brit Award. Now she’s made a breakthrough, this could be her year.
Lola Young jumps into a car, laughing uncontrollably as she flashes a brand new set of shiny gold teeth.
“I just got grills fitted,” she explains once she’s regained her composure. “But they’re like so intense, so you’re rocking with this today, and a lisp.”
She’s been running a few minutes late for the interview and this explains why – so she can finish getting her dental jewellery accessories fitted, with which she seems extremely pleased.
The screen suddenly freezes. The car she’s in is somewhere in the US and the reception has cut out.
Young made her US TV debut on Jimmy Fallon’s talk show the night before, which followed a whirlwind trip to Australia, and she’ll soon set off on a sold-out European tour. She’s talking on Zoom as her manager drives her to the next stop on her schedule.
Travelling the world and in high demand, but making time to get a full set of solid gold teeth grills fitted – she’s living a proper pop star’s life.
And she is now a proper pop star. After several years of almost making it – she sang on the 2021 John Lewis advert, was on the BBC Sound of 2022 list and had glowing reviews for her two albums – Messy has given her a bona fide hit.
The song became inescapable at the end of 2024 and completed its climb to the top of the charts on Friday.
The 24-year-old is the first current British artist to have a UK number one since Chase and Status and Stormzy in August, the youngest to do so since Dave in 2022, and the youngest British woman to score a chart-topper since Dua Lipa in 2017.
Her number one came a day after she was nominated for best pop act at the Brit Awards.
“The response has been amazing and it’s been really exciting to see all the love that Messy has been receiving,” says Young, speaking earlier in the week.
“I love the song, it’s a song I wrote that’s really personal and really important to me. So I’m really happy that it’s resonating so much.”
Messy was released on her second album This Wasn’t Meant For You Anyway last May.
Its trajectory was supercharged when superstar US influencers Sofia Richie Grainge and Jake Shane posted a 14-second TikTok clip of themselves dancing to its chorus. Young’s song has now been used in 1.3 million videos on the platform – from Kylie Jenner lip-syncing as a dog, to a viral clip of an old woman vaping and holding a pint alongside the caption “94 and still messy”.
The singer would like to point out that the track’s success is not simply down to TikTok, however.
“That’s not necessarily how it blew up. I would like to say that the song was blowing up before TikTok, and it was having its moment elsewhere. A lot of things contributed to the success.
“The TikTok thing is great. I don’t make music for Tiktok. I make music for myself and for my fans, but the Sofia Richie thing is just one element of how well it did in every aspect.
“But yeah, it’s been great to see every side of it.”
Contradictions
The track was indeed starting to gain traction before finding TikTok virality, and has only done so well because it is more than a mere meme.
Its lyrics, about never being good enough for someone whatever you do, have connected deeply with fans. “I want to be me, is that not allowed?” she implores.
“I guess it’s because the song speaks to so many people in terms of, I’m talking about the idea that there’s two sides of a person, the contradictions,” Young says.
The song captures how it is “to basically feel like you’re not enough for somebody and also in turn not enough for yourself”.
Amid the craziness of its success, there’s some relief that she has now reached the next level in her career.
“I mean, I feel like it’s the right time,” the 24-year-old says after reconnecting the call. “It’s been a minute, but also it does feel like the right time for me.”
Grit and charisma
Like Messy, many of her tracks are one-sided conversations – mainly with an unseen, unreasonable and unsuitable man (or woman).
When it was released, the Observer said the album had “a winning combination of zingers and vulnerability”, and the Telegraph said it showed “all of the grit and charisma of a seasoned artist”.
Other songs continue the theme of double-edged romance. Wish You Were Dead is about a relationship that veers between being affectionate and volatile; while in Big Brown Eyes, Young gets weak-kneed when a lukewarm love interest insults her.
Unlike some artists, there’s little need to ask Young what her songs are about – the stories are laid out in her raw and razor-sharp lyrics.
But how real are the situations and scenarios about which she sings?
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“Pretty real. As real as it gets, to be honest,” she replies.
“I just write from my own experience and they’re very real. They’re all the things that I’ve been through, all situations I’ve had, and all experiences I’ve had.”
The honesty of her songwriting sets her apart from many other artists, but she says she knows no other way.
“I don’t think about it. Music is the only place I can be dead honest,” she says. “Not that I’m a liar…
“But I feel like that’s my outlet, the place I can be the most honest. I never really think about it. It doesn’t feel like a difficult thing to do, or something that feels like I’m baring my soul or anything. It’s just I’ve always done that in my music.”
The album ends with an equally candid spoken-word outro, in which she says the LP was written to help her accept and love herself, and to realise she doesn’t need “no ugly man (or woman)”.
“I haven’t got there yet but I will,” she says on the track.
‘Different angle’ on Brat
Young is managed by two men who separately worked with Amy Winehouse and Adele, and Young has something in common with those two artists in her combination of fragility and front.
To that, she adds the conversational tone of Lily Allen and the modern pop sensibility and chaotic energy of Charli XCX.
Young’s breakthrough coincided with the reign of Charli’s Brat ethos, which she defined as “a girl who is a little messy, likes to party, maybe says dumb things sometimes, feels herself, and has a breakdown but parties through it”.
Young feels an affinity with that. “I massively do, and I think it’s that thing of empowered women who like to party and be themselves, and that’s really important to me,” she says.
“I guess I come from a different angle – of a less heightened version of that, I guess. It would be more like, ‘I don’t really give a [care], but I also really do’. That’s what I guess I stand by a little bit more.”
Bratpop season will stretch further when Young releases her next album later this year. It is nearly finished and will “dig deeper” than the last, she says. How much deeper can she really dig?
“Quite a lot,” she says. “There’s quite a lot more to say. There’s a lot of other topics and things that have happened to me, and things that I’ve gone through that I want to discuss with people.
“But also things that are a little bit less about love, and about other things that I’ve gone through.”
Now that Messy’s cleaned up, we can expect to see more of Young, and her shiny teeth.
Politics
Keir Starmer left waiting by the phone as Donald Trump opts to call Saudi Crown Prince and China’s Xi Jinping instead
Sir Keir Starmer is still waiting to receive a phone call with Donald Trump following the 47th President’s inauguration on Monday.
Trump, who finally returned to the Oval Office after his thumping victory in November, has already reached out to a number of global leaders, including Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, El Salvador leader Nayib Bukele and Chinese President Xi Jinping.
The Prime Minister’s deputy official spokesman appeared to issue a plea for Trump to call Starmer ahead of an expected visit to Washington.
He said: “The Prime Minister would welcome the opportunity to speak to President Trump at the earliest opportunity and they had a productive meeting in September and subsequent positive phone calls in recent months and he looks forward to speaking to him soon.”
When challenged on whether it was unusual that no phone call had taken place, the deputy official spokesman replied: “I wouldn’t accept that characterisation.
Trump’s predecessor Joe Biden spoke to then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson just three days after his 2021 inauguration.
Theresa May also jetted out to Washington within a week of Trump’s first stint in the White House in 2017, becoming the first world leader to meet the then-45th President.
However, Starmer last saw Trump for a three-hour dinner alongside Foreign Secretary David Lammy in September.
LATEST ON LABOUR’S TRUMP TENSIONS:
Despite the pair calling on December 18, much has been made of the fractured relationship between Trump and Starmer’s Labour.
Lammy is among senior Cabinet figures to have significantly shifted his stance on Trump.
Having previously labelled the President a “neo-Nazi”, Lammy is now hoping to forge close ties with Trump and his Vice President JD Vance.
Trump’s allies have also suggested that the 47th President’s team could look to block Starmer’s US Ambassador pick Lord Peter Mandelson.
The rift comes after Labour staffers also attempted to help Kamala Harris campaign against Trump in key swing states.
Despite their efforts, Trump won the election and filed a complaint to the Federal Electoral Commission.
Lord Glasman, who was the only Labour figure invited to Trump’s inauguration, detailed some of the challenges facing the Prime Minister.
He told PoliticsHome: “I’m obviously trying to communicate with them as best I can.
“I’m not expecting them to do cartwheels when the Prime Minister wasn’t invited, the Foreign Secretary wasn’t.
“It’s a difficult moment for them, and I’m just doing my best to represent Labour and the Government in the way that I can… They want an alliance with the UK, à la Churchill or Thatcher… They are looking for the government to be their partner, but they don’t see any indication that they are.”
NewsBeat
Prince Harry campaigners could bring private prosecutions against The Sun's publisher if police don't open fresh probe
Campaigners who supported Prince Harry through his legal battle against News Group Newspapers (NGN) aren’t ruling out the possibility that private criminal prosecutions would be filed if police don’t open fresh investigations.
NewsBeat
‘Once in a generation’ Storm Eowyn hits UK with 100mph winds
Storm Eowyn has hit Britain and Ireland with “once in a generation” hurricane-force winds, cancelling more than 1,000 flights and leaving 250,000 homes without power as forecasters warn more is to come.
Residents in the worst-affected regions have described “crazy” weather conditions, as trees were felled, public transport was brought to a halt and high winds turned everyday objects into dangerous missiles. In Co Donegal, a man died after a tree fell on his car.
The Met Office issued a rare red warning in Scotland, with people urged to remain indoors as the severe weather posed a potential danger to life.
A gust of 100mph was recorded at Drumalbin in South Lanarkshire early on Friday afternoon, while in Ireland records were broken after winds reached 114mph, with almost one million properties left without power.
Meanwhile, trains and ferries were suspended across Scotland and hundreds of schools were shut, with vehicles blown over and roads closed in some areas due to debris.
Severe weather conditions are set to continue over the weekend, with an amber weather warning in place on Saturday and further travel disruption expected.
BBC weather presenter Judith Ralston described Storm Eowyn as a “once in a generation” weather event, while Northern Ireland’s first minister Michelle O’Neill said the region was currently “In the eye of the storm”.
One in five flights to, from or between British and Irish airports were cancelled on Friday, affecting around 150,000 passengers with Dublin, Edinburgh, Heathrow and Glasgow the worst hit.
Hundreds of passengers also spent hours on flights that returned to their points of departure after being unable to land at their planned destinations.
Ryanair flight RK596 from Stansted, Essex, to Edinburgh reached the Scottish capital’s airport but could not touch down safely.
After circling over the Borders it returned to Stansted, landing two hours and 44 minutes after taking off.
Commuters were faced with chaos, with train operators ScotRail, Avanti West Coast, LNER, West Midlands Railway, Lumo, Transport for Wales and Southern Western Railway all forced to delay or cancel some services.
Motorists in areas covered by red and amber weather warnings have also been told to avoid travel “unless absolutely essential” and take extra caution on the roads.
National Highways said the A66 between the A1M in North Yorkshire and M6 in Cumbria, and the A628 Woodhead Pass in Derbyshire and South Yorkshire, were both closed overnight because of strong winds.
The Isle of Man’s Department of Infrastructure has declared a major incident because of the number of fallen trees and their impact on arterial roads emergency services, the government said on X.
Hurricane-force winds are those that reach at least 74mph, according to the Beaufort scale, the Met Office said. Wind speeds reached up to 96mph in Brizlee Wood in Northumberland, and 93mph in Aberdaron in north Wales, with a red warning extended until 5pm for large parts of Scotland.
In order to prepare people for the storm, around 4.5 million people received emergency alerts on their phones, which has been described as the “largest real-life use of the tool to date”.
In Galway, several trees that had stood for over six decades were uprooted, with local residents describing the winds as “scary”, while an ice skating rink in Dublin also had its roof blown away.
With authorities advising people to remain indoors in Scotland, judge Craig Revel Horwood announced the upcoming Strictly Come Dancing live show in Glasgow has been postponed until Sunday. He apologised for “any inconvenience this may cause” to the guests and confirmed the original tickets will remain valid for the new show.
SP Energy Networks said there are currently 20,000 customers across central and southern Scotland without power and the company said its engineers are working to restore supplies where possible.
Aileen Rourke, of SP Energy Networks, said: “We’ve seen wind speeds of almost 90mph with conditions remaining treacherous, hampering our ability to assess and repair damage.
“As soon as it is safe to do so, our engineers will be out in the field working to get the power back on for people as soon as we can.”
Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks (SSEN) Distribution said as of 12.30pm, it had successfully restored power to 9,660 customers who had lost supplies since the storm began early on Friday.
It said there were 15,771 customers without power, and as the “extremely severe” storm continues to move across Scotland, it expects further disruption.
A further yellow wind warning covers the rest of UK for all of Friday.
Yellow warnings for snow are in place in Scotland, from 6am to midnight, and rain in south-west England and Wales until 9am.
In Northern Ireland, a yellow warning for snow and ice has been issued between 7pm Friday until 10am Saturday. More amber and yellow weather warnings for wind and rain have also been issued for across the weekend and on Monday.
On Saturday, an amber warning has been issued for northern Scotland, with strong winds likely to cause widespread distuption and damage to some buildings.
By Sunday, two yellow weather warning cover most of Wales, northern Ireland and south-west England, and are due to last from 8am until 6am on Monday.
Politics
I was in Washington for the inauguration. What I saw shattered Khan’s veiled attack on Trump
On January 20th, London Mayor Sadiq Khan plastered his social media with a series of conciliatory if not vague messages.
“We’re living in increasingly uncertain times, and I know many Londoners are concerned by what’s taking place around the world,” wrote Sadiq.
Sadiq shared a photo of himself smiling benevolently beneath a Piccadilly Circus LED screen. A screen which beams the assuring “London is and will always be a place for everyone”.
Now cynics will say he has deliberately timed these with Donald Trump’s second inauguration as President of the United States. Kahn’s critics will say this is just more vacuous virtue signalling from Mr Kahn.
They’ll bemoan his pronouncements as typical progressive platitudes. They will seethe that our “DEI” Mayor is making allusions to geopolitics when violent crime, knife crime and rape and sexual offences have all risen under his mayorship.
But not I! Unlike those critics, I will give our great leader the benefit of the doubt. But what could he possibly be alluding to?
In Washington D.C. recently, still buzzing and high from Donald Trump’s victory rally at the Capitol One Arena on Sunday, I racked my brains.
Sadiq would’ve loved it. The Village People, chaps, tashes and leather. They tore the roof off. It was old-school diversity. Turbo-diversity. When DEI and S&M went cock in hand. Sadiq “Diversity is our greatest strength” Kahn would’ve been shaking his little booty with joy.
Donald Trump won the election in a landslide victory
Reuters
He can’t have been referring to Trump’s America.
What could it be? When I lay back in my hotel room, the sound of cacophonous patriotism bouncing up from the streets below, I tried to find answers on the tele.
Israel ceasefire and hostage deal agreed upon, including a British hostage. Soon-to-be-Sir Sadiq must have been overjoyed.
This is what Sadiq’s has been tweeting about for the last year and a half. A deal forced through by Trump, according to Benjamin Netanyahu anyway.
Sadiq is no doubt thrilled by the immediate impact by America’s returning Commander-in-chief.
He couldn’t have been referring to Trump’s America.
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After all, thanks to exposure by Elon Musk, Britain’s Pakistani rape gangs scandal – where our country’s most vulnerable children who have been abused, tortured and in some cases brutally murdered – has been given global attention at last.
Thanks to Trump’s team, the American media and X, we in Britain are being nudged towards justice for the girls. No doubt Sadiq will be thrilled.
He can’t have been referring to Trump’s inauguration. After all, a majority of American-Muslims voted for Trump in opposition to the Democrat’s disregard for traditional family values and chaotic foreign policy which has left the middle east, and Eastern Ukraine in rubbles.
When I watched the swearing in ceremony beneath the Capitol building Rotunda, I laughed to myself. Those silly critics probably think Khan was referring to this. Silly them.
Prayers from both a Rabbi and Pastor Lorenzo Sewell from Detroit. A glorious display of America’s founding mantra “E Pluribus Unum” – of the many one.
A mantra that celebrates diversity but recognises unity as more important. I know Sadiq loves Diversity, but are you to tell me the idea of unity would offend him? Surely not.
Now I can’t tell you exactly what he was referring to. But I for one have no reason to believe those posts have anything to do with the return of Donald J. Trump to The White House.
A celebration of diversity, unity, democracy, and patriotism. A rejection of Biden’s disastrous foreign policy and, one hopes, a return to Trump’s first term of relative global peace.
I tell you what. I’ll come back to you.
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