‘No referendum’ headlines will anger Cameron
Today’s headlines may say that David Cameron has ruled out a referendum on Europe, but Political Editor Gary Gibbon is not convinced.
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All of this suggests that it is the mobile phone operators, not Ofcom or the government, who are responsible for much of the delay. In any event, Labour’s record on speeding up the process was hardly exemplary.
EDF becomes the latest power company to raise its energy prices, by a bigger margin than its competitors British Gas, Scottish and Southern Energy, Scottish Power and npower.
Israeli troops take control of a boat carrying pro-Palestinian MPs and activists who are trying to pass through its naval blockade on the Gaza Strip.
The European Union is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its role in creating a “continent of peace”. But in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the end of the war, is the timing ironic?
The Nobel Peace Prize is the most prestigious award of its kind, but after criticism over the committee’s politicisation and questions raised over recent winners, is the prize losing its credibility?
Today’s headlines may say that David Cameron has ruled out a referendum on Europe, but Political Editor Gary Gibbon is not convinced.
While survival rates for some types of cancer, including breast and colon, have improved dramatically over the past 40 years, the UK record for ovarian cancer remains relatively poor.
As the third largest offshore windfarm opens off the Norfolk coast, there are fears that the government’s increasingly mixed signals on renewables are putting future private investment at risk.
If increasing spending on overseas aid were a vote winner, David Cameron would surely have something to shout about. But is public opinion on his side?
When Norwegian mother of three, Hege Jeanette Oksnes, is pregnant or gives birth someone in her family wins the national lottery – the latest win came within months of the arrival of her third child.
David Cameron has claimed there are more armed police officers on the nation’s streets. But is that true? FactCheck investigates.
Marriage in English law is still a fundamentally heterosexual activity: “The union of one man, with one woman, voluntarily entered into for life.” The Church of England happens to think it should stay that way.
Commodities juggernaut Glencore sweetens its offer for Xstrata after delaying the shareholder vote on the mega-merger due to “overnight developments”.
Internet access remains a luxury good in most countries with connections costing almost half of average monthly incomes, according to a global study launched by the web’s inventor Tim Berners-Lee.
Anders Breivik’s psychiatrist speaks to Channel 4 News Home Affairs Correspondent Simon Israel about how she found Breivik to be “a normal man with quite weird ideas”.