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No Writer
Jun 12
Industry attacks government over 'crippling' delay to defence spending plan | Mark Kleinman blog

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Bethany Minelle, arts and entertainment reporter
Jun 12
Taylor Swift makes musical history - again

A multi-Grammy-winning artist, in 2023 Swift smashed touring records when her Eras Tour became the first to take over $1bn (£745m). Her success inspired the coining of the term "Swiftonomics" to describe the boost in local spending which would accompany each of her gigs as she travelled around the globe. Accepting the honour, Swift told the audience: "It was instinctual. No one taught me how to do it". She went on to thank her family for their sacrifices, moving from Pennsylvania to Nashville, Tennessee, to support her music career when she was just 14. Just last year, Swift officially bought back the rights to her first six albums, after re-recording them as "Taylor's Versions". Swift also offered young songwriters advice: "You really have to prioritise what you love, down to your very core. Because you'll need that." The prize was introduced by Disclosure Day director Steven Spielberg, who said of Swift's songwriting prowess: "Somehow Taylor knows us all too well". Although making history as the youngest woman to be inducted, the overall record for the youngest songwriter ever inducted is held by Stevie Wonder, who started his recording career at just 13. Others taking awards on the night included Kiss founders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, Footloose writer Kenny Loggins, Christopher "Tricky" Stewart - who's the songwriter behind Rihanna's Umbrella - and Alanis Morissette. Established in 1969, the Songwriters Hall of Fame honours those creating popular music. A songwriter with a notable catalogue of songs qualifies for induction 20 years after the first commercial release of a song. In recent years, the trend of established artists selling off their back catalogues for large sums has put the business value of songwriting firmly in the public eye. Stars already in the hall include Elton John, Gloria Estefan, Carole King, Jon Bon Jovi, Bruce Springsteen, Olivia Newton-John and Phil Collins.

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Beth Rigby, political editor
Jun 12
Little love lost for Labour government among focus group of Makerfield voters

His pitch to the voters of Makerfield in the North West is that he is for them. His proof point is how hard he fought for Greater Manchester during the COVID-19 crisis. Burnham's fury - caught live on the cameras in the centre of Manchester - in 2020 when he learned that the Conservative government was cutting financial support and putting Manchester into a stricter lockdown, was immortalised in memes that spread all over social media as he launched a blistering attack on Westminster for trying to grind people down. "It's brutal to be honest, isn't it? This is no way to run the country in a national crisis. It isn't. This is not right," he said. His campaign slogan, "Vote Andy, for us", is borne from that period. Now he wants to take that fight from Manchester to No 10, and is knocking on doors around the small towns and villages that make up the constituency, promising voters he will put their communities and others like them that have "been at the back of the queue" at the front of it. I do understand where he is coming from and why his argument is potent and has appeal. For someone who grew up in the south of England, went to Cambridge and now lives in north London, you might at first bundle me into that "Westminster elite bunch". But my parents came from a very different place and background. 'I spent much of my childhood in Makerfield' My late mum was born and grew up in Orrell, in the Makerfield constituency. It was a place where I spent much of my childhood, visiting my grandparents, Ann and Bill, in their red-brick terraced house in Upholland Road. It is a place surrounded by beautiful countryside, near the lakes, where we used to go camping as kids. The people are warm and look out for each other, the communities are proud, and there is a real sense of place. It is also a place that my parents, like countless others of that post-war generation, left in order to pursue their careers. My sense as a child was that my mum and my dad, who grew up in Lancaster and won a scholarship to Cambridge, felt they had to move away from Wigan to get the sort of jobs they wanted. When I was a teenager in the late 1980s and early 1990s, one of my family members came south to live with us to train to be a bricklayer - as my grandfather Bill was - because he couldn't get the training in Wigan. I still have family in Makerfield and Wigan. Makerfield is a working-class place made up of former coalfield communities. There is little immigration, not much social housing, and its population tend to be educated to GCSE level or have apprenticeships rather than higher education qualifications. Nearly 97% of the population is white, against an average of 82% across the country. Makerfield is also badly served by rail links, which means that, despite being nestled between Manchester and Liverpool, it has not become a commuter belt. Its town centres have become run-down and have become a big conversation in this election. It is also now Labour's sixth most vulnerable seat in the North West. So it has become not just a local election but a symbol, a test case of whether Andy Burnham's Labour Party can win back the red wall that in the 2019 general election turned to Boris Johnson and in the most recent local elections turned to Reform, as the party picked up 24 out of the 25 council seats contested in Wigan in May. Voters thinking 'very carefully' who to vote for We travelled up to Makerfield this week to talk to some of the people who will decide the by-election with the More in Common polling company. The group of voters selected was made up of people who have, or are considering, voting for all the main parties standing. It was clear from the conversation I observed between them and pollster Luke Tryl that they are thinking very carefully about how to vote this time. Our group all understood how important this by-election is and what the implications might be, not just for Makerfield but the entire country. Mike Irving, a veteran who told us he had never voted Labour in his life, said he had been to a coffee morning hosted by Burnham and was considering lending Burnham his vote in this by-election. "We've got a voice here to change the country," he told us. "We've got a chance of a lifetime here to impact the way we want it to be." Gillian Reed was considering her vote against the other leadership options: "There's gonna be a leadership challenge regardless of the outcome. So your choices then are looking like Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting, Ed Miliband, and possibly David Lammy. They're the names that are being touted. I'd rather have Andy Burnham than any of them." Andrew Gower said he thought Andy Burnham was "one of us". "I like him more than Keir Starmer. I think he's more for the working class. That's how he just comes across, like he's one of us, you know, rather than one of these politicians, like the majority of them, who you can't trust," he explained. Anthony Wood, a retired firearms officer, was less sold on Burnham as he spoke of the Manchester growth effect not spilling out to places like Makerfield, citing what he thought were poor transport links. He said: "In my profession, quite a lot are anti-Andy Burnham… Just about what they feel he hasn't achieved or what he hasn't done for Manchester itself." Laughing group dismissive of Starmer When the group was asked what they thought of Keir Starmer, they looked at each other and laughed. There wasn't anger towards him; the mood was instead dismissive. Leah Aldred told us:  "I don't know much about him, but I know that I don't like him. But when I'm actually asked that question, I can't tell you why I don't like him." Others picked up on the U-turns, with some criticising Starmer's decision to reverse the two-child benefit cap and the Mandelson debacle. Anthony Wood said: "All the U-turns they've done. [They say] we'll do this and everyone goes 'ooohhh' so they drop it and go back. And then they do something else and somebody else [says something]. How can they not have got this right with all the years they've had a chance to plan it?" Gillian Reed said Starmer doesn't represent the Labour she grew up with, adding: "Just everything he does seems to be against the working people. "Everybody might need help at some point in their life. But what about young families, young working families who are both going out to work? They've got a couple of kids and they are scraping by week to week. Where's the help for those people?" This part of the North West voted Reform in May's local elections, with all the council seats in this constituency going to Nigel Farage's party. Burnham's team know this is a high-risk race and it is flush or bust. They hope that Labour voters who have left the party will come back to give Burnham a chance. One senior figure who knows Makerfield well explains that voters here think Labour has left them and they want Labour to be better. They want a leader who "represents the people to the system not the system to the people". Welfare and immigration main topics for voters One thing that struck me in the focus group was voters' approach to welfare and immigration. These were clearly a group of people who believe in the social contract, but think the government has let them down on welfare and immigration. They spoke often about fairness and their perception that political leaders are not being fair when it comes to people working hard and paying in and others - be those on long-term benefits or illegal migrants - who are not. Mike Irving made the point that he thought some people "treat benefits as a salary and it shouldn't be, it's not affordable". Tracey Lay also dived into the sense of fairness around welfare, saying: "I think we need to shake up the welfare system. I don't think it's about cutting the welfare bill, as in lowering the amount of money that people are paid. "What people are currently paid is not liveable. It's disgraceful. But I think there are people that are being paid benefits that should not be entitled to benefits and I'm not necessarily talking about immigrants. I'm talking about the situation that you have with generational benefits claimants, of never having any intention of working regardless. "I think if you've paid in, fine. If you've never paid in, then I think they should give them work in order to claim their benefits. Clean the streets, pick up the litter." Gillian Reed spoke of a sense of unfairness about having to provide for those arriving in the country on small boats: " If you're a young couple, a single person with no children, and you're made homeless, then you're just left to fend for yourself. You won't be put up in a hotel or in temporary housing or anything. "Now, if you come over on a boat, on a dinghy, immediately that night you've got a bed for the night, you've got a roof over your head and you've got all your basic things that you need. You'll get health care. You'll get dental care which is inaccessible to most people at the moment. "And that's why people are up in arms about it, because that's fundamentally unfair." Mixed views on Reform candidate Reform's Robert Kenyon had mixed reviews from the group. The local plumber has made his lack of political experience a virtue, but some voters picked up on that when he was placed against Burnham, with Gillian Reed calling him "a bit wet behind the ears". "He's not going to be able to make any real changes for us or for the country," she added. Mike Irving thought Kenyon would have "walked it" in a general election but was facing much greater scrutiny and pressure in the by-election. Kenyon's disparaging remarks about women split the group. Leah Aldred said Kenyon was "your average narcissistic, sexist man to be honest", while Gillian Reed and Tracey Lay were a little more forgiving. "I've heard most of those comments from extended family members. It's the kind of thing people say. I don't think it necessarily represents exactly what you believe," Tracey said. But Anthony Wood made the point that those comments could cost you your job in other professions and you wouldn't have got to your 30s or 40s in your career: "You'd have said that, and you'd have been binned." 'It's a two-horse race between Labour and Reform' As for the other parties, our focus group had little to say about them. Saxon Bright was positive about the Greens, but made the point that this was a two-horse race between Labour and Reform. "I think if we could get the Green Party in there, I think they would do a lot of good. And I think in other areas they've done a lot of good," he said. "But again, you've got to vote tactically. And I think if you vote for Green now, you kind of shoot yourself in the foot in a lot of ways." Mike Irving thought Michael Winstanley for the Conservatives came across well on the BBC Question Time panel: He said: "He's used to public speaking as an ex-mayor of Wigan. When you're comparing him against the way the Reform candidate spoke, it's like chalk and cheese, but they've no chance round here." The focus group didn't know much about the Lib Dems. Read more: Who is standing in the Makerfield by-election? But Rupert Lowe's Restore Party is getting some cut-through in this by-election. When I asked Nigel Farage about why he thought the former Reform MP's new outfit was picking up support in Makerfield earlier this week, he was quite tetchy, saying it was being driven by Elon Musk's support for Restore and the amplification the world's richest man and owner of X gives you on social media platforms. But the competitor on the right of Reform is causing difficulties for them in this race. "I really like Rupert Lowe. I think he comes across a lot better than a lot of other politicians," Tracey Lay said. "I don't think he should have put his cap in the game for Makerfield. I think it's splitting the right vote and it's going to allow Andy Burnham to win. I think he's made a mistake." Little love lost for Labour government My main takeaway from the focus group is that there is very little love lost among these voters when it comes to the Labour government, and that they are fed up with politicians making promises that they don't keep. There is genuine concern about the cost of living, welfare and immigration and a desire to put a sense of fairness and personal responsibility back into the social fabric of our country. It was also pretty clear to me that if Burnham does win the Makerfield by-election next week, it will be his personal brand that carries it, and he will be able to go to Westminster emboldened as the politician that can beat Reform. John Healey's resignation this week has only served to hasten Starmer's departure from No 10 should Burnham succeed in Makerfield next week. Team Burnham would like an orderly transition, and the pressure will only build on Starmer if Burnham succeeds. An election to be decided next week by 76,800 people living in this constituency nestled between Manchester and Liverpool will affect millions more.

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No Writer
Jun 12
World Cup 2026: Thomas Partey refused entry to Canada ahead of Ghana's opener with Panama in Toronto

FIFA confirmed Partey was unable to travel from Ghana's US base in Boston to Toronto with the rest of his team-mates as his visa application "has been refused by the Canadian government". Thomas Partey trial over rape and sexual assault allegations delayed to June 2027 The former Arsenal midfielder, who now plays his club football for Villarreal, is facing allegations of rape and sexual assault by four different women, who accuse him over incidents between 2020 and 2022. His trial will start in June 2027. Partey denies the charges. Partey is on bail during the legal proceedings, with a condition that he does not contact alleged victims. As it stands, Partey, 32, is available to play against England in Ghana's second Group L fixture, which takes place in Boston on Tuesday June 23. Ghana's final group game is with Croatia in Philadelphia on June 27. FIFA said: "FIFA is not involved in the immigration processes of host countries, including the adjudication of visas. As with previous FIFA events, the host government ultimately determines who receives a visa and is admitted into the country." Sky Sports News has contacted Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) and the Ghanaian FA for comment. The charges against Partey Partey, who left Arsenal for Villarreal in June 2025, was charged in July 2025 with five counts of rape and one allegation of sexual assault, dating back to 2021 and 2022. In February this year, it was announced that Partey had been charged with two additional rape allegations dating back to December 2020. The footballer has appeared previously in the dock to plead not guilty to all charges - seven counts of rape and one count of sexual assault. The midfielder, who previously lived in Potters Bar in Hertfordshire, joined Arsenal from Atletico Madrid in 2020 in a transfer worth around £45m. The next hearing in his case has been set for October 2, 2026, with the trial set to begin on June 8, 2027.

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Beth Rigby, political editor
Jun 12
Little love lost for Labour government among focus group of Makerfield voters

His pitch to the voters of Makerfield in the North West is that he is for them. His proof point is how hard he fought for Greater Manchester during the COVID-19 crisis. Burnham's fury - caught live on the cameras in the centre of Manchester - in 2020 when he learned that the Conservative government was cutting financial support and putting Manchester into a stricter lockdown, was immortalised in memes that spread all over social media as he launched a blistering attack on Westminster for trying to grind people down. "It's brutal to be honest, isn't it? This is no way to run the country in a national crisis. It isn't. This is not right," he said. His campaign slogan, "Vote Andy, for us", is borne from that period. Now he wants to take that fight from Manchester to No 10, and is knocking on doors around the small towns and villages that make up the constituency, promising voters he will put their communities and others like them that have "been at the back of the queue" at the front of it. I do understand where he is coming from and why his argument is potent and has appeal. For someone who grew up in the south of England, went to Cambridge and now lives in north London, you might at first bundle me into that "Westminster elite bunch". But my parents came from a very different place and background. 'I spent much of my childhood in Makerfield' My late mum was born and grew up in Orrell, in the Makerfield constituency. It was a place where I spent much of my childhood, visiting my grandparents, Ann and Bill, in their red-brick terraced house in Upholland Road. It is a place surrounded by beautiful countryside, near the lakes, where we used to go camping as kids. The people are warm and look out for each other, the communities are proud, and there is a real sense of place. It is also a place that my parents, like countless others of that post-war generation, left in order to pursue their careers. My sense as a child was that my mum and my dad, who grew up in Lancaster and won a scholarship to Cambridge, felt they had to move away from Wigan to get the sort of jobs they wanted. When I was a teenager in the late 1980s and early 1990s, one of my family members came south to live with us to train to be a bricklayer - as my grandfather Bill was - because he couldn't get the training in Wigan. I still have family in Makerfield and Wigan. Makerfield is a working-class place made up of former coalfield communities. There is little immigration, not much social housing, and its population tend to be educated to GCSE level or have apprenticeships rather than higher education qualifications. Nearly 97% of the population is white, against an average of 82% across the country. Makerfield is also badly served by rail links, which means that, despite being nestled between Manchester and Liverpool, it has not become a commuter belt. Its town centres have become run-down and have become a big conversation in this election. It is also now Labour's sixth most vulnerable seat in the North West. So it has become not just a local election but a symbol, a test case of whether Andy Burnham's Labour Party can win back the red wall that in the 2019 general election turned to Boris Johnson and in the most recent local elections turned to Reform, as the party picked up 24 out of the 25 council seats contested in Wigan in May. Voters thinking 'very carefully' who to vote for We travelled up to Makerfield this week to talk to some of the people who will decide the by-election with the More in Common polling company. The group of voters selected was made up of people who have, or are considering, voting for all the main parties standing. It was clear from the conversation I observed between them and pollster Luke Tryl that they are thinking very carefully about how to vote this time. Our group all understood how important this by-election is and what the implications might be, not just for Makerfield but the entire country. Mike Irving, a veteran who told us he had never voted Labour in his life, said he had been to a coffee morning hosted by Burnham and was considering lending Burnham his vote in this by-election. "We've got a voice here to change the country," he told us. "We've got a chance of a lifetime here to impact the way we want it to be." Gillian Reed was considering her vote against the other leadership options: "There's gonna be a leadership challenge regardless of the outcome. So your choices then are looking like Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting, Ed Miliband, and possibly David Lammy. They're the names that are being touted. I'd rather have Andy Burnham than any of them." Andrew Gower said he thought Andy Burnham was "one of us". "I like him more than Keir Starmer. I think he's more for the working class. That's how he just comes across, like he's one of us, you know, rather than one of these politicians, like the majority of them, who you can't trust," he explained. Anthony Wood, a retired firearms officer, was less sold on Burnham as he spoke of the Manchester growth effect not spilling out to places like Makerfield, citing what he thought were poor transport links. He said: "In my profession, quite a lot are anti-Andy Burnham… Just about what they feel he hasn't achieved or what he hasn't done for Manchester itself." Laughing group dismissive of Starmer When the group was asked what they thought of Keir Starmer, they looked at each other and laughed. There wasn't anger towards him; the mood was instead dismissive. Leah Aldred told us:  "I don't know much about him, but I know that I don't like him. But when I'm actually asked that question, I can't tell you why I don't like him." Others picked up on the U-turns, with some criticising Starmer's decision to reverse the two-child benefit cap and the Mandelson debacle. Anthony Wood said: "All the U-turns they've done. [They say] we'll do this and everyone goes 'ooohhh' so they drop it and go back. And then they do something else and somebody else [says something]. How can they not have got this right with all the years they've had a chance to plan it?" Gillian Reed said Starmer doesn't represent the Labour she grew up with, adding: "Just everything he does seems to be against the working people. "Everybody might need help at some point in their life. But what about young families, young working families who are both going out to work? They've got a couple of kids and they are scraping by week to week. Where's the help for those people?" This part of the North West voted Reform in May's local elections, with all the council seats in this constituency going to Nigel Farage's party. Burnham's team know this is a high-risk race and it is flush or bust. They hope that Labour voters who have left the party will come back to give Burnham a chance. One senior figure who knows Makerfield well explains that voters here think Labour has left them and they want Labour to be better. They want a leader who "represents the people to the system not the system to the people". Welfare and immigration main topics for voters One thing that struck me in the focus group was voters' approach to welfare and immigration. These were clearly a group of people who believe in the social contract, but think the government has let them down on welfare and immigration. They spoke often about fairness and their perception that political leaders are not being fair when it comes to people working hard and paying in and others - be those on long-term benefits or illegal migrants - who are not. Mike Irving made the point that he thought some people "treat benefits as a salary and it shouldn't be, it's not affordable". Tracey Lay also dived into the sense of fairness around welfare, saying: "I think we need to shake up the welfare system. I don't think it's about cutting the welfare bill, as in lowering the amount of money that people are paid. "What people are currently paid is not liveable. It's disgraceful. But I think there are people that are being paid benefits that should not be entitled to benefits and I'm not necessarily talking about immigrants. I'm talking about the situation that you have with generational benefits claimants, of never having any intention of working regardless. "I think if you've paid in, fine. If you've never paid in, then I think they should give them work in order to claim their benefits. Clean the streets, pick up the litter." Gillian Reed spoke of a sense of unfairness about having to provide for those arriving in the country on small boats: " If you're a young couple, a single person with no children, and you're made homeless, then you're just left to fend for yourself. You won't be put up in a hotel or in temporary housing or anything. "Now, if you come over on a boat, on a dinghy, immediately that night you've got a bed for the night, you've got a roof over your head and you've got all your basic things that you need. You'll get health care. You'll get dental care which is inaccessible to most people at the moment. "And that's why people are up in arms about it, because that's fundamentally unfair." Mixed views on Reform candidate Reform's Robert Kenyon had mixed reviews from the group. The local plumber has made his lack of political experience a virtue, but some voters picked up on that when he was placed against Burnham, with Gillian Reed calling him "a bit wet behind the ears". "He's not going to be able to make any real changes for us or for the country," she added. Mike Irving thought Kenyon would have "walked it" in a general election but was facing much greater scrutiny and pressure in the by-election. Kenyon's disparaging remarks about women split the group. Leah Aldred said Kenyon was "your average narcissistic, sexist man to be honest", while Gillian Reed and Tracey Lay were a little more forgiving. "I've heard most of those comments from extended family members. It's the kind of thing people say. I don't think it necessarily represents exactly what you believe," Tracey said. But Anthony Wood made the point that those comments could cost you your job in other professions and you wouldn't have got to your 30s or 40s in your career: "You'd have said that, and you'd have been binned." 'It's a two-horse race between Labour and Reform' As for the other parties, our focus group had little to say about them. Saxon Bright was positive about the Greens, but made the point that this was a two-horse race between Labour and Reform. "I think if we could get the Green Party in there, I think they would do a lot of good. And I think in other areas they've done a lot of good," he said. "But again, you've got to vote tactically. And I think if you vote for Green now, you kind of shoot yourself in the foot in a lot of ways." Mike Irving thought Michael Winstanley for the Conservatives came across well on the BBC Question Time panel: He said: "He's used to public speaking as an ex-mayor of Wigan. When you're comparing him against the way the Reform candidate spoke, it's like chalk and cheese, but they've no chance round here." The focus group didn't know much about the Lib Dems. Read more: Who is standing in the Makerfield by-election? But Rupert Lowe's Restore Party is getting some cut-through in this by-election. When I asked Nigel Farage about why he thought the former Reform MP's new outfit was picking up support in Makerfield earlier this week, he was quite tetchy, saying it was being driven by Elon Musk's support for Restore and the amplification the world's richest man and owner of X gives you on social media platforms. But the competitor on the right of Reform is causing difficulties for them in this race. "I really like Rupert Lowe. I think he comes across a lot better than a lot of other politicians," Tracey Lay said. "I don't think he should have put his cap in the game for Makerfield. I think it's splitting the right vote and it's going to allow Andy Burnham to win. I think he's made a mistake." Little love lost for Labour government My main takeaway from the focus group is that there is very little love lost among these voters when it comes to the Labour government, and that they are fed up with politicians making promises that they don't keep. There is genuine concern about the cost of living, welfare and immigration and a desire to put a sense of fairness and personal responsibility back into the social fabric of our country. It was also pretty clear to me that if Burnham does win the Makerfield by-election next week, it will be his personal brand that carries it, and he will be able to go to Westminster emboldened as the politician that can beat Reform. John Healey's resignation this week has only served to hasten Starmer's departure from No 10 should Burnham succeed in Makerfield next week. Team Burnham would like an orderly transition, and the pressure will only build on Starmer if Burnham succeeds. An election to be decided next week by 76,800 people living in this constituency nestled between Manchester and Liverpool will affect millions more.

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No Writer
Jun 10
Doctor Who Christmas special cancelled as showrunner leaves sci-fi programme

Davies said it was "goodbye" from him to Doctor Who but "hello to a big new future for the show", as he shared on social media a drawing of the Tardis - the spaceship from the hit show. The 2026 Christmas special was due to be written by Davies and produced by Bad Wolf, and would follow on from the series finale in May last year, which saw Ncuti Gatwa's incarnation of the Doctor regenerate into Billie Piper. The corporation announced last October there would be a 2026 Christmas special, but confirmed on Wednesday it will no longer happen. Davies, an award-winning screenwriter and TV producer, said on Instagram: "There won't be a Christmas Special - we only cooked that up to guarantee a future when no one knew what would happen, but now we do know, there's no need for it. "You'll have to wait a bit longer for new Doctor Who...but you'll be waiting for more Doctor Who than a one-off. So it's worth it!" He also said he was "excited as anyone to see what comes next" and reflected on the possible changes to come, adding: "Will they keep the theme tune? Will they lose the blue box? Will they bring back the Drahvin?! "It's all up for grabs, which is so Doctor Who - exciting and unpredictable and new! Here comes the future." The BBC said that the series, which launched in 1963, will be put out to "competitive tender" this year as part of its Royal Charter agreement. The broadcaster is inviting production companies to put themselves forward to help co-produce the next series, BBC News reported. Cancelling the Christmas special was "not taken lightly", the corporation said, and the BBC admitted the move will be "disappointing for fans". It added that "in order to set the show up for future series, it was decided that rather than bridge the gap with a one-off special, we are choosing to push forward to invest in the long-term future of the show". A spokesperson for the BBC added: "Doctor Who remains an important part of the BBC and this tender underpins the BBC's continued commitment to Doctor Who, ensuring audiences will enjoy the show for years to come." In addition, the corporation assured that its previously announced Doctor Who animation series, which will air on CBeebies, is currently in production. Read more from Sky News:Henry Nowak protesters jailedUkraine strikes Russian factory Doctor Who is about an eccentric Time Lord who travels in a spaceship larger on the inside, which disguises itself as a 1960s British police box. Tom Baker, Sylvester McCoy and William Hartnell are among the stars who portrayed The Doctor in the original show, which was cancelled in 1989. It was later revived in 2005 by Davies. Actors including Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant, Matt Smith and Jodie Whittaker have played the leading role in the last two decades.

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No Writer
Jun 12
Sir Jeffrey Donaldson denies apology to alleged victim was about abuse

The former MP insisted he made the remark when he met with the woman because he was "sorry if she felt uncomfortable". He also denied a barrister's suggestion he had been "caught in the act" during a separate incident where he is accused of using a light to stare at another alleged victim. The former DUP leader, 63, who is on trial at Newry Crown Court, pleaded not guilty to 18 alleged offences, including one count of rape and allegations of indecent assault and gross indecency between 1985 and 2008. Two women, referred to as Complainant A and B, both allege they were abused as children and have given evidence at the trial for historic offences. Donaldson's wife, Lady Eleanor Donaldson, 60, denies several charges of aiding and abetting her husband's alleged offending. She is facing a trial of the facts on mental health grounds. On Friday, prosecution barrister Rosemary Walsh KC continued to cross-examine Donaldson for a second day. She referred to a meeting between Donaldson in the 1990s and 'Complainant B', which also involved David Hoy, the founder of the Christian Family Centre in Armoy in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. The jury previously heard 'Complainant B' stayed at the centre in the 1990s after developing an issue with drugs, and told a church pastor about the alleged abuse. The court previously heard Complainant B claim Donaldson apologised to her at that meeting. He said he was not apologising for any allegations of abuse. The barrister asked Donaldson if he did not see "anything strange" about the approach from Mr Hoy, to which Donaldson said it was "not unusual" for him to get a phone call from someone he had never met before. Ms Walsh suggested Donaldson needed to meet Mr Hoy because "he was going to be talking to you about a sensitive matter". Donaldson said: "That is absolutely not true," adding that he had not tried to "avoid the meeting", and was happy to meet Mr Hoy. Read more from Sky News:Girl charged with attempted murderMan 'launched frying pan' at policeSky News investigates Belfast attacks Ms Walsh pointed out that Mr Hoy's evidence to the court was that an "allegation" had been made. Donaldson answered: "The word allegation was never mentioned to me. If it had been mentioned I would have immediately asked what it was about." Ms Walsh said Donaldson attended the meeting in Amoy as he "knew this was something you needed to nip in the bud", but the defendant replied: "That is not true at all." Questioned over apology When asked about the apology at the meeting, the former MP told the court he had said he was "sorry if she felt uncomfortable". The barrister asked: "What were you apologising for?" He said: "That she felt uncomfortable." Donaldson also denied suggestions from Ms Walsh that he did not want Complainant B "going through allegations" and attempted to "shut her down". Donaldson denies touching girl Ms Walsh then moved on to allegations against Donaldson made by Complainant A, to which Donaldson denied any sexual abuse started when she was of primary school age. The barrister asked about the allegations of abuse, including "touching outside of clothing", putting his tongue in her mouth, and using a light, possibly a torch, to look at her genitals. In each case, he strongly denied the allegations. He also denied the barrister's suggestion that he was "panicking" over claims he was "caught in the act". The trial continues on Monday.

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Jun 12
Super League: Maika Sivo scores twice as Leeds Rhinos weather a fightback in Toulouse to return to top of table

The Rhinos, who at one point led 30-0, were ahead within three minutes when stand-off Brodie Croft made the most of the Toulouse defence's failure to deal with Jake Connor's kick, and the scrum-half added the conversion. Winger Sivo was handed a 17th-minute walk-in in the corner by Ash Handley's quick hands, and centre Harry Newman powered his way over five minutes later with Connor converting both to make it 18-0. Get Super League tickets hereNot got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream contract-free on NOWChoose the Sky Sports push notifications you want Fergie McCormack made no mistake after full-back Cesar Rouge had spilled another high ball from Connor, who duly obliged with the extras, and Newman repeated the dose seven minutes before the break after Luke Polselli had faltered under another aerial assault with Connor on target once again. However, the hosts reduced the deficit on the stroke of half-time when Rouge's line break allowed Thomas Lacans to go over, and Jake Shorrocks' kick made it 30-6 at the break. The French side clawed their way to within 18 points when Polselli collected Benjamin Laguerre's kick-through within seconds of the restart and Shorrocks made it two from two from the touchline. Lacans went over with 48 minutes gone to further boost Toulouse's hopes of an unlikely comeback, and they were right back in it six minutes later when Laguerre accepted Polselli's pass and went over in the corner after McCormack had knocked on, with Shorrocks again on target. Sivo steadied Leeds' nerves when he claimed his second of the night before Chris Hankinson and replacement Cameron Smith made sure with their side's seventh and eighth tries respectively as time ran down, Connor maintaining his perfect record with the boot to finish with 16 points. Asked what he was thinking when Olympique got back to within six points, Leeds head coach Brad Arthur told Sky Sports: "I was excited about the challenge. "They were playing with energy, everything was sticking and the bounce of the ball was going their way, so I was really excited to see, 'righto, where are we at? How can we get back on top of this game? Can we show some composure or do we panic?'. "Full credit to the boys, they showed composure, led by Jake (Connor), and we didn't panic, and that just shows another evolution in our game and a bit of growth in our game." Toulouse head coach Sylvain Houles said: "Obviously when you play Leeds Rhinos and it's 30 points, the gap, to come back is always tough. "It's been the same story when we are playing those top-six teams. I look at the Wigan game, Hull KR games - we always fall down and try to come back, and we do. We manage, we're brave, we fight hard, we show a lot of resilience, but we need to make sure we don't fall that far." 2026 Super League - key dates and what to look out forMagic Weekend: July 4-July 5Rivals Round reversed: July 23-July 26Elimination Play-offs: September 19-September 20Play-off semi-finals: September 26-September 27Grand Final: October 3, Old Trafford Sky Sports will again show every game of the Super League live this season - including two matches in each round exclusively live, with the remaining five matches each week shown on Sky Sports+

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