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21.10.2024 20:08
A very narrow victory for EU membership in Moldova The outgoing pro-European president, Maia Sandu, came out on top in the first round of the presidential election but fell short of the overwhelming support she had hoped for in the referendum, winning with only 50.39% of the vote, according to near-final results.

21.10.2024 21:02
Macron to visit Morocco next week The French president will head to Morocco on a three-day state visit on October 28, the Moroccan royal palace said in a statement Monday, after three years of tense relations between the two countries.

21.10.2024 21:11
Keir Starmer praises Charles after king was heckled in Australia UK PM says monarch is doing 慳 fantastic job after protest by senator in Australian parliament King Charles is doing a 揻antastic job, particularly in the context of his 揾ealth challenges, the prime minister has said after the royal was heckled by the Indigenous Australian senator Lidia Thorpe.Charles had just finished addressing MPs and senators at Parliament House in Canberra, as part of his five-day tour of Australia with Camilla, when he was approached by Thorpe, who yelled: 揟his is not your country. Continue reading... ...

21.10.2024 21:44
Employment rights bill will cost firms ?5bn per year but benefits will justify costs, government says as it happened Analysis from business and trade department says bill will significantly strengthen workers right. This live blog is closedIn the past the weirdest budget tradition was the convention that the chancellor is allowed to drink alcohol while delivering the budget speech. But since no chancellor has taken advantage of the rule since the 1990s (and no one expects Rachel Reeves to be quaffing on Wednesday week), this tradition is probably best viewed as lapsed.But Sam Coates from Sky News has discovered another weird budget ritual. On his Politics at Jack and Sam抯 podcast, he says:Someone messaged me to say: 慏id you know that over in the Treasury as they抳e been going over all these spending settlements, in one of the offices, its full of balloons. And every time an individual department finalises its settlements, one of the balloons is popped.扵here couldn抰 be a more important time for us to have this conversation.The NHS is going through what is objectively the worst crisis in its history, whether it抯 people struggling to get access to their GP, dialling 999 and an ambulance not arriving in time, turning up to A&E departments and waiting far too long, sometimes on trolleys in corridors, or going through the ordeal of knowing that you抮e waiting for a diagnosis that could be the difference between life and death.We feel really strongly that the best ideas aren抰 going to come from politicians in Whitehall.They抮e going to come from staff working right across the country and, crucially, patients, because our experiences as patients are also really important to understanding what the future of the NHS needs to be and what it could be with the right ideas. Continue reading... ...