- Rescuers step up recovery operations as Southeast Asia flood deaths reach 321 Reuters
- Scores killed as floods sweep several Asian nations BBC
- Death toll from floods and landslides on Indonesia’s Sumatra rises to 164 Toronto Star
- Flash flooding in Sumatra kills 69 as rescue crews search rivers for survivors The Guardian
- Flood deaths rise to 174 in Indonesia, surge across Southeast Asia Al Jazeera
Two former Peruvian presidents jailed in two days
Pope, Orthodox leader mark Christian milestone in historic Turkiye meeting
Business secretary claims workers’ rights bill U-turn doesn’t breach Labour’s manifesto – UK politics live
Peter Kyle denies unfair dismissal policy U-turn is breach of manifesto pledge but unions and Labour MPs criticise decision
On Wednesday Kemi Badenoch had to respond to Rachel Reeves’s speech because, by convention, with budgets that’s a job for the leader of the opposition, not the shadow chancellor. And normally no one takes much interest, because what’s in the budget is more interesting.
But Badenoch’s speech has attracted a lot of attention, for two reasons. First, even by Badenoch’s standards, it was unusually personal, and brutal. The full text is here, but it’s best to watch it to get a full sense of what it was like. As an example of precision, parliamentary viciousness, it was like Norman Tebbit in the 1970s. Some people were appalled, but Tories have said it was easily her best Commons peformance to date and that view is shared by others too. Even Alastair Campbell and Rory Stewart, the gods of centrist punditry, judged it to be highly effective.
When I walked in for prime minister’s questions, I thought, ‘Oh my goodness, she looks absolutely broken, this OBR leak must be very upsetting for her, I’ll pull my punches.’
And then she launched into the most extraordinary tirade against the Conservatives in her own speech. So she started it … And I thought, ‘Well, I’m not pulling any punches now.’
Well, you can’t please everybody.
But I also have to deal with a barrage of abuse every single week at prime minister’s questions. The prime minister can get very personal. Labour MPs shouting – there’s only 120 Conservatives. There’s well over 400 Labour MPs.
Continue reading...UK energy bill payers will hand £2bn a year to EDF for new power stations
French government-owned company to receive funding for Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C
UK energy bill payers will hand over £2bn a year in subsidies to EDF, the French company building two new nuclear power stations, according to government figures.
EDF, owned by the French government, will be entitled to £1bn in annual payments as soon as Hinkley Point C, in Somerset, comes on to the grid in 2030.
Continue reading...‘The new Hamilton’? Show with Mary Todd Lincoln as drunken first lady comes to London
The one-act play Oh, Mary! – ‘the stupidest, funniest thing possible’ – to open after blockbuster run in New York
What if, in the final weeks before Abraham Lincoln’s assassination, the first lady could not care less about the American civil war and was instead hell-bent on becoming a cabaret star?
That is the question posed by Oh, Mary!, the smash-hit show that reimagines Mary Todd Lincoln as a gloriously unhinged alcoholic who despises her closeted husband.
Continue reading...Runaway nuns can stay in Alpine convent if they leave social media
In remote Venezuelan state, more surveillance follows US boat strikes – Reuters
St Vincent opposition party celebrates historic election win
New Democratic party victory is crushing defeat for Unity Labour, which has held power since 2001
The New Democratic party (NDP) in the Caribbean country of St Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) is celebrating a historic landslide victory, taking 14 of 15 seats, according to preliminary results.
The decisive vote was a crushing defeat for the Unity Labour party (ULP), which has been in power since 2001.
Continue reading...ICC judges reject request to release former Philippine President Duterte – NBC News
- ICC judges reject request to release former Philippine President Duterte NBC News
- Rodrigo Duterte loses appeal for release from ICC custody DW
- Philippine's detained ex-leader Duterte loses appeal Reuters
- Duterte case: ICC Appeals Chamber confirms the decision rejecting the request for interim release | International Criminal Court
- ICC rejects ex-Philippine leader Duterte’s appeal for provisional release Al Jazeera
‘Delays inevitable’: Starmer leadership safe until May elections, say Labour MPs
While some call budget ‘tactical victory’, few MPs believe it is enough for Labour to beat Reform
Labour MPs have said they believe Keir Starmer’s leadership is safe until at least the May elections, after a budget that avoided any major damaging measures but which few MPs believe will revive the party’s fortunes.
More than a dozen previously loyal MPs told the Guardian they did not believe the budget would shift the fundamentals required for the party to beat Reform. “It only delays what is inevitable,” one minister said.
Continue reading...Guinea-Bissau president flees to Senegal after coup
Sri Lanka closes offices and schools as death toll from landslides and floods rises to 56 – NBC News
- Sri Lanka closes offices and schools as death toll from landslides and floods rises to 56 NBC News
- Sri Lanka Battered by Cyclone as Death Toll Climbs to 69 The New York Times
- Death toll reaches 69 as Sri Lanka is hit by rising flood waters The Guardian
- Sri Lanka braces for more flooding as Cyclone Ditwah claims 46 lives Reuters
- Cyclone Ditwa: At least 40 dead in Sri Lanka after severe floods BBC
Pub chain Mitchells & Butlers faces £130m hit from rising wage and food costs
Group, which also owns restaurant brands including Toby Carvery, feels impact of increase in employer NICs
The All Bar One owner, Mitchells & Butlers, has warned that it is facing about £130m in extra costs over the next year because of a soaring wage bill and rising food prices.
The group, which also owns brands including Toby Carvery, Harvester and Miller & Carter, said the cost increases were largely being driven by April’s increases to the minimum wage and employers’ national insurance contributions.
Continue reading...Will Bangladesh’s Hasina face the hangman?
Pope Leo XIV begins Turkiye visit with prayers and unity message
Venezuela explained in 10 maps and charts
India’s Olympic ambition in spotlight as Commonwealth Games build-up begins
Ukraine corruption scandal threatens Zelenskyy’s special relationship with top aide
Police raid at the home of Kyiv’s main peace negotiator is causing shock waves across Ukraine’s political scene
The revelation that anti-corruption police are searching the property of Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, could have huge repercussions for the Ukrainian political scene and possibly for peace negotiations as well.
It is hard to overstate the significance of Yermak in the Ukrainian political system. He combines multiple roles for Zelenskyy: most trusted sounding board, domestic political enforcer, controller of access to the president, main point of contact for foreign politicians, and chief peace negotiator. Yermak is such a powerful chief of staff that people who know how the president’s office operates describe his relationship with Zelenskyy as symbiotic.
Continue reading...Alabama priest leaves clergy after woman alleges ‘private companionship’ beginning when she was 17
Robert Sullivan’s self-imposed removal comes after accusations he provided financial support in exchange for arrangement which included sex
A longtime Roman Catholic priest in Alabama has voluntarily left the clergy after a woman alleged to his superiors that he provided her financial support in exchange for “private companionship” including sex beginning when she was 17.
Robert Sullivan’s self-imposed removal from the priesthood – known as laicization – was announced Wednesday, the day before the US holiday of Thanksgiving, in a public statement from Birmingham, Alabama, by Bishop Steven Raica.
Continue reading...