John Whittingdale: the minister, the papers and the dominatrix
We will probably never know if the newspapers that didn’t publish the Whittingdale story were hoping to apply pressure to the Culture Secretary.
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We will probably never know if the newspapers that didn’t publish the Whittingdale story were hoping to apply pressure to the Culture Secretary.
Eminent scientists are warning that funding for research is at risk if Britain pulls out of the EU. Are they right?
Boris Johnson grabbed most of the newspaper front pages this morning after announcing he will be campaigning for Britain to leave the EU.
Conspiracy theories are blaming the Zika health crisis on everything from pesticides to genetically modified mosquitoes. Don’t bite.
The Prime Minister says he has persuaded Brussels to give Britain a blueprint for “substantial change”. Reality or rhetoric?
Muslim women could be deported if they fail a new English test – or so the headline-writers would have us believe. What are the facts?
North Korea’s leaders say the communist country has successfully tested a hydrogen bomb. Should we believe them? Should we panic?
The attacks in France dominated the headlines, while the media were accused of ignoring other victims of the so-called Islamic State’s global campaign of terror.
Britain bombs IS but considers Saudi Arabia a close ally, despite widespread criticism of the Gulf kingdom’s human rights record. Is it fair to compare the two?
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is facing calls for his resignation after telling his MPs that he will not support military action in Syria.
The Sun has been widely criticised for claiming that a fifth of British Muslims sympathies with jihadis. What’s the truth of the matter?
I’m just back from Paris – exhausted and not a little upset by what I saw and heard. One of the few good things to come out of these bleak few days is the sudden interest in atrocities committed in the Middle East and Africa. Some have criticised us – the media – for unequal coverage of…
Whilst Rangers FC were busy winning titles and silverware the entire basis upon which they paid many players and executives should have attracted income tax and did not do so.
Chancellor George Osborne says tax credit reforms will go ahead, despite the government’s dramatic defeat in the Lords on cuts for millions of low-income families.
Nicola Sturgeon tried to put the second referendum issue to one side this morning so her conference would focus on the Holyrood elections. But she didn’t put the issue in the long grass … you can distinctly see it still popping up above the vegetation. The SNP leader and First Minister told her party that…