White storks could soon be wheeling in the skies above London and building their huge nests among towers, flats and spires as a result of new rewilding plans.
After the success of the charismatic birds’ successful reintroduction into southern England since 2016, a white stork working group has been established to seek out habitat and gauge the political will to reintroduce the birds to Greater London.
Citizen Zoo, a group specialising in community-led urban rewilding that helped establish the Ealing beaver project, which has just produced its first beaver kits, will examine places where the birds could be returned and engage with London boroughs and local community groups.
“We know we have habitat here, and there’s a lot of wetland restoration occurring across Greater London as well so hopefully the habitat opportunities are increasing over time,” said Elliot Newton, co-founder of Citizen Zoo. “We don’t know if it’s possible yet but how amazing would it be if white storks nested in St James’s Park, beside Buckingham Palace, as a symbol of ecological recovery in the capital?”
In 2020, storks bred in the wild in Britain for the first time since a pair was recorded nesting on the roof of St Giles’ cathedral in Edinburgh in 1416.
There have been 40 sightings of white storks visiting parts of the capital in recent years, and although the birds seek out insect-rich farmland and wetlands some nest on the fringes of large European cities including Munich and Lisbon.
In London, storks have been spotted at Beddington Farmlands nature reserve near Croydon and around Wandsworth Common.
White storks fly long distances as they migrate through Europe and more have been seen across southern and central Britain this summer. The increase in sightings in recent years is due to the success of the White Stork Project centred on the Knepp estate in West Sussex, 45 miles south of central London.
At Knepp, a flightless population of 30 birds brought over from a rescue centre in Poland has been used as a “magnet” to draw in wild storks flying overhead, and the birds have mixed and built nests in ancient oaks.
Last year saw the best-ever year for the storks, with 26 chicks fledging from 11 nests across the 3,500-acre estate. The British-born birds have dispersed widely along the south coast and into Europe, with one found breeding in the Netherlands.
The White Stork Project aims to establish a wider breeding population across Britain, and both it and Citizen Zoo see the birds, which are celebrated in many European cultures as symbols of good luck and fertility, as a way to reconnect urban people with wild species.
“White storks breed excitement,” said Newton. “We’re hoping to engage and motivate people to consider their reintroduction into London. It’s such a beautiful bird that people will recognise and see, and it can capture the imagination of people who might miss other species. It will be a symbol of ecological regeneration in urban spaces across the UK.”
Lucas Ruzo, chief executive of Citizen Zoo, said: “Their return will not only be about returning a species once lost, but also a poetic reminder of the bond between humanity and the natural world.”
Citizen Zoo has successfully led the reintroduction of the large marsh grasshopper into wetlands across East Anglia by encouraging hundreds of ordinary people to rear the insects in their houses for release into the wild.
Dressed in celestial white, her hair scraped back from her forehead, Tilda Swinton looks as serene and translucent as one of the aliens in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The mothership has deposited her today on a striped cream sofa under a tree-filled window. âIâm in Scotland,â she tells me with crisply enunciated good cheer, before addressing the other face on our video call: Julio Torres, writer-director-star of the surreal new comedy Problemista, who just got back to Brooklyn after taking the film to Copenhagen and Guadalajara. âJulio, you probably donât know where you are,â she says. âIâm fairly sure this is my apartment,â he replies, his youthful face and copper-tinted pixie-cut filling the screen.
The affinity between Swinton, the 63-year-old arthouse doyen and self-described âboyish, angular freakâ, and Torres, the 37-year-old queer comic genius and ex-Saturday Night Live writer, is evident in the way they riff on each otherâs gags, or swap favourite movie moments to mutual delight. Take it from me: you havenât lived until youâve heard Swinton spend two minutes painstakingly describing an old Austin Powers routine as Torres listens, wide-eyed and rapt.
They have gone from being online friends to collaborators and now besties (a week after our conversation, they are hanging out together at Glastonbury). Somewhere in between, they made Problemista, in which Torres transforms his experience of being a Salvadoran immigrant in New York City into a whirlwind comic fantasy with echoes of Jacques Tati, Terry Gilliam and Franz Kafka. Torresâs own visa declares him âan alien of extraordinary abilityâ, but the future looks shakier for his character, Alejandro, a budding toy designer who urgently needs a sponsor if he is to stay in the US. Failed applicants vanish instantly into thin air.
His potential saviour is the volatile art critic Elizabeth, played by Swinton with a West Country burr and a frizzy scarlet scare-do. She sees in this shuffling dogsbody the ideal assistant to help her mount an exhibition of egg paintings by her cryogenically-frozen late husband (played by Wu-Tang Clanâs RZA). As she dangles the promise of sponsorship, her demands on Alejandro become ever more onerous. She is, to put it mildly, a lot.
Swinton adores her. âOne of the things I love about Elizabethâs high-handedness is that weâve seen this kind of autocratic behaviour before, but never out of the mouth of such a mess,â she says. âWeâre used to that attitude coming from a perfect height, down a very clean slope, straight in the gullet.â Indeed, Elizabeth behaves as if she is Meryl Streep in The Devil Wears Prada, when in fact she is more like Meryl Streep in Ironweed. âSheâs a wreck. Thereâs this rackety-ness to everybody in the film. Theyâre all hanging on by their nails.â
The character feels like a compendium of some of Swintonâs greatest hits: the bolshie magazine editor in Judd Apatowâs Trainwreck, the tyrannical deputy overlord in Bong Joon-hoâs Snowpiercer and the alcoholic kidnapper in Erick Zoncaâs thriller Julia. (âOh, she was a hot mess,â Swinton agrees.) When Torres points out that Problemista is essentially a film about âa secondary character and a villainâ, Swinton embraces the idea. âNot even a primary villain,â she adds, much to his giggly amusement.
Elizabeth is a woman of many grievances; something as minor as an abundance of walnuts on a cafe menu can set her off. Nothing like Swinton, then. âIâm hopeless at asking for what I want,â she says. âI have never, ever sent food back, and I never would. Iâve been with people who have, and it is mortifying.â
Torres shudders in sympathy. âItâs like, what do you do with your eyes?â he asks. âYou just have to look down, right?â Swinton cringes back: âAnd then, whatâs going to come out of the kitchen?â
The only time Iâve heard of Swinton displaying any remotely Elizabeth-like tendencies was on the set of Sally Potterâs groundbreaking Orlando more than 30 years ago. A mutual friend of ours, who happens to be American, erroneously referred to Swinton as English rather than British or Scottish; she responded by slapping him. âWell, Iâll slap myself on the back for that now,â she says. Then she warms to the schoolmarm image. âI mean, he should know better, Ryan. And you know these Americans: youâve got to teach them. Quite right!â
That aside, she is all pussycat. Itâs touching, for instance, to hear her describe Problemista as a love story. âElizabeth and Alejandro are both exactly what the other needs, even though theyâre a nightmare for each other,â she says. They certainly lack the supportive artistic communities which have nourished the actors who play them. Torres found his own tribe on the Brooklyn standup circuit: after his day job archiving the papers of the late painter John Heliker, he performed comedy routines in bars. âI would read abstract one-liners and stories from a notebook. Some of us who were worlds unto ourselves gravitated toward one another.â Today, he is a magnet for Hollywoodâs more adventurous talent: Emma Stone produced Problemista; Fantasmas, his darkly bizarre new HBO series, stars Natasha Lyonne, Steve Buscemi and Paul Dano; Jon Hamm has called him âphenomenally giftedâ.
For Swinton, it was becoming a muse to Derek Jarman, and joining his coterie, that made her feel she belonged. After starring in his 1986 masterpiece Caravaggio, she collaborated with Jarman almost exclusively until his death from Aids in 1994. âIt was a way of life, not just a way of working. The conversations were the most important things. It was like: âOh, this year weâre going to do Edward IIâ and ânext year, weâre going to do Wittgensteinâ. The works came out of those conversations, which were all engendered around a kitchen table, usually in Dungeness. We made the films, but we didnât sweat them. I think it was healthy because we were all interested in each other, and the works were just leaves off the tree.â
Torres wasnât even born when Swinton met Jarman, but he has long been a fan of hers. For his 2019 live show My Favourite Shapes, he even produced a model of what he imagined her apartment to be like: there was a hive of pods for her guests to sleep in, and a giant egg-timer to tell them when to leave. âAs you can see, thatâs very accurate,â she says now, swivelling the laptop around to reveal her cosy, non-sci-fi surroundings, and a pair of black-and-white springer spaniels. Torresâs pod-based fantasy, though, taps into her otherworldly aura. When he asks whether she had trouble accessing an online link to watch Fantasmas, she replies: âThere are elves in my house who do that for me.â
Despite admiring her, Torres was no expert. âIâm inept at knowing the lives of the people behind the things I love. Tilda for me was a fantastic actor and, frankly, a concept.â She places a hand to her face, and trembles with laughter. âI wish my parents were still alive, and I could tell them that Iâm considered a concept,â she says, prompting yet more giggles from Torres. âBut I think thatâs beautiful!â he protests. âBetter that than, like: âOh, sheâs the actress who dated that person, then got a divorce from this other person, and her kids hate her!ââ Swinton accepts the distinction (âAh, trueâ) and glows appreciatively.
What was her impression, in turn, of him? Even prior to Problemista, after all, there was ample evidence of a cuckoo sensibility in his supernatural comedy series Los Espookys, and his SNL sketches: Ryan Gosling as a man haunted by the naff Papyrus font used in Avatar; Emma Stone advertising a Fisher-Price wishing-well for sensitive boys; Harry Styles as a lovelorn social-media wonk who posts horny gay messages (âWreck me daddyâ) on the Sara Lee Instagram account he is meant to be managing.
âI was enchanted by Julio from the beginning,â says Swinton. âItâs good for us all, I think, the world of his mind. Itâs so visionary and sophisticated.â Hearing himself described as âsophisticatedâ, Torres gently points out that he cast Swinton in the role of Toilet Water in Fantasmas. That in turn reminds me of his book for children, I Want to Be a Vase, in part about a toilet plunger with lofty dreams. âI do like toilets as concepts,â he concedes. âBeing a toilet is a job thatâs inherently demeaning, so humanising that is exciting to me.â
In exposing the whimsical secret underworld of our daily lives, Torres is like a benign David Lynch. But he insists that lending consciousness to inanimate objects â such as the snooty curtain that divides first class from economy on a plane in My Favourite Shapes â is something we all do. âWhen we decide which outfit is âtoo muchâ and which one is appropriate, or whether a dress of certain proportions is serious or unserious, weâre projecting those qualities on to it, right?â
Running through all his work, including Problemista, is an authentic dread of the corporate and bureaucratic. Torres has spent his life avoiding credit, and even lived for a while without a bank account. How estranged is he today from the systems he abhors? âWell, thatâs the comedy and the tragedy. The more you try to disentangle yourself, the more tangled you get. Itâs inescapable. Any time I have to make an account for something, it feels like an impossible task.â
Swinton concurs: âItâs like that disgusting and brilliant South Park episode where you end up with your lips sewn on to someoneâs arse, and youâve got to eat shit because that was in the small print, and you signed the form. But we need a certain amount of connectivity so we turn a relative blind eye to all that. Otherwise weâd go nuts.â
About the corporate side, Torres sounds less forgiving, especially when talk turns to how companies only began displaying rainbow flags once it became fashionable to do so.âThe beautiful thing about queer people â and I use that term broadly â is our innate quest for the âbiteâ,â he says. Itâs a word Swinton had used earlier to denote the enduring frisson of queerness, its cutting edge. âI think we are not pacified by a bank putting up a Pride flag,â he continues. âI think we say: âYouâre decades late, but thank you.ââ Swinton nods, and offers her own addendum to the banks: âMoving on â¦â
âExactly,â Torres says. âMoving on, what would make the banks and the corporations uncomfortable today? Because that is where the bite is.â Any suggestions? âI think thereâs a million social issues. Companies are going to wait a decade or two before they put those flags up.â For now, Swinton and Torres can just keep flying their own freak flags. No problemo.
Nigel Farage has been elected as the MP for Clacton, finally succeeding in getting a seat in parliament at his eighth attempt.
The Reform UK leader’s victory came on a night when the hardline rightwing party surged in support elsewhere, winning four seats by 4am on Friday, with the former Conservative deputy chair Lee Anderson successfully defending his seat in Ashfield.
Richard Tice, Reform’s chair and the man who stepped aside so Farage could return, won Lincolnshire constituency of Boston and Skegness, calling it “the proudest day of my life”. The former Southampton football club chairman Rupert Lowe also won a seat in Great Yarmouth, which has been held by the Conservatives since 2010.
Farage defeated the Conservative candidate, Giles Watling, who had represented the coastal constituency in Essex since 2017. Farage won 21,225 votes to Watling’s 12,820, a majority of 8,405.
In a speech after his victory was announced, Farage served notice that his party would be turning its guns on Labour.
“We are coming for Labour … be in no doubt about that,” he said, in a short speech at a leisure centre in the seaside town.
Revelling in the Conservative party’s heavy defeat across the country, Farage railed against the party he had once been a member of, telling reporters: “They are literally a broad church that has no shared religion.”
He ruled out working in parliament with the Conservative party itself but opened the door to Tory MPs coming over to Reform.
Asked if he wanted to become prime minister, he replied: “Whatever happens, happens, and probably by 2029 this movement will have found someone younger and better looking than me.”
Farage told reporters he would “speak up” and provide a challenge in government. As to what Tory MPs should do, he said those who were part of the “one nation” tradition should stay where they were, while others should look to Reform and “join the team”.
“They are so split down the middle. They spent the last four years fighting each other, so God knows what they will be like now,” he said.
Clacton had been regarded as Reform UK’s best hope of taking a seat. It was the only constituency to return a Ukip MP in a general election when it was won in 2015 by Douglas Carswell, who had successfully retained it during a byelection the previous year after defecting from the Tories.
Anderson described his constituency of Ashfield as “the capital of common sense” in his victory speech after polling 17,062 votes, beating Labour’s 11,553.Anderson’s old party was beaten into fourth place by an independent candidate.
In his acceptance speech after winning with a 1,425 majority over Labour, Lowe said a “flood of change was coming over Britain’s political system”.
“I’m intent on ensuring we end up with more common sense in government; that we put the British people first,” he added. “I’m committed to bring about change in Westminster and thereby bring about change in Great Yarmouth.”
Reform had been projected to win as many as 13 seats, according to the 10pm exit poll. Declarations in north-east England showed it outpolling the Conservatives to come second to Labour. But early results for target seats Barnsley North and Barnsley South showed Reform coming second. After Farage’s victory, expectations had been tempered and Reform believed it would win about four seats.
Before his election, Farage had used a video posted on X to deliver his first response to the exit poll, saying: “It’s midnight, there are two results in from the north-east of England that put Reform on 30% of the vote; that is way more than any possible prediction or projection. It is almost unbelievable.”
Early declarations underlined the surge in support for the party in what had been strong Brexit-supporting areas of north-east England, where Reform outpolled the Tories in a number of seats.
Nigel Farage has hailed Reform UKâs âalmost unbelievableâ early performances in former leave-voting seats, predicting that the party will win âmany, many seats right across the countryâ as the election unfolds.
Lee Anderson, the former Conservative deputy chair who became Reformâs first MP earlier this year when he joined the hard-right party, won its first seat of the night when he held his Ashfield constituency.
The MP described Ashfield as âthe capital of common senseâ in a victory speech after polling 17,062 votes, beating Labour on 11,553. Andersonâs old party was beaten into fourth place by an independent candidate.
Reform was projected to win as many as 13 seats in the general election, according to the 10pm exit poll. Declarations in north-east England showed it outpolling the Conservatives to come second to Labour.
The projection also indicated that Farage, who returned as leader of the party last month, was set to win the Essex seat of Clacton.
Farage used a video posted on X to deliver his first response to the exit poll, saying: âItâs midnight, there are two results in from the north-east of England that put Reform on 30% of the vote; that is way more than any possible prediction or projection. It is almost unbelievable.
âAnd what does it mean? It means weâre going to win seats, many many seats, I think, right now, across the country. But to watch the TV coverage, itâs almost comical.
âThereâs not a single representative on there from Reform UK. Mainstream media are in denial just as much as our political parties. This is going to be 6 million votes-plus. This, folks, is huge.â
While there was caution about how the poll of 20,000 would ultimately translate into seats, it was clear that millions of people had voted for the hard-right, anti-immigration party, which has previously indicated its intent to destroy the Conservative party.
Ben Habib, Reformâs deputy leader, was the first of the partyâs senior figures to seize on the BBC/ITV/Sky survey projection. He tweeted: âThis is a huge bridgehead. This is politically seismic. This is the beginning of the fightback for the nation state of the United Kingdom.â
Early declarations underlined the surge in support for the party in what had been strong Brexit-supporting areas of north-east England, where Reform outpolled the Tories in a number of seats.
While Farage has always kept his cards close to his chest about how many seats he expected to win, the projected seat share is believed to be much higher than what he could have hoped for.
Farageâs agent, Peter Harris, told the Guardian that it was early days but the party appeared to be in a strong position. âWe could see that there was a strong turnout. In places like Jaywick, the queues were long, and had people in there who had not voted before or had given up on voting until now,â he said.
The expected vote share opened up the possibility of the electorate returning Reform MPs in target seats from Essex, the Kent Coast, south Wales and Yorkshire and the Humber.
Richard Tice, Reformâs chair and the man who stepped aside so that Farage could return, appeared to be in a strong position to win in the Lincolnshire constituency of Boston and Skegness, which has been represented by Tory Matt Warman since 2015.
Others who were in a strong position included the former Southampton Football Club chair, Rupert Lowe, who was running in Great Yarmouth, which has been held by the Conservatives since 2010.
Margaret Hodge, the former Labour minister, likened the challenge of Reform to that posed by the British National party, which she faced down during a battle for her Barking seat in 2010. She told the BBC: âItâs where they put their vote if they donât have trust.â
A note of caution was sounded by Prof Sir John Curtice, the psephologist and lead election analyst for the BBC, who said that the projected seat shares for Reform UK and the SNP werethe two figures about which he and others were least certain.
The White House has described the latest Hamas ceasefire proposal for Gaza as a âbreakthroughâ establishing a framework for a possible hostage deal, but warned that difficult negotiations remained over the implementation of the agreement.
A senior US official said the Biden administration received the latest Hamas offer âa couple of days agoâ and had been studying it ahead of a 30-minute telephone call between Joe Biden and Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday.
âThe conversation was detailed, going through the text of the agreement, constructive and encouraging, while also clear-eyed about the work ahead [and] the steps that must be put in place to finalise this deal and then begin the implementation,â the US official said of the call.
Netanyahu was due to convene a meeting of his security cabinet on Thursday evening to discuss the Hamas proposal, and is dispatching a negotiating team to the Qatari capital, Doha, for talks with US, Egyptian and Qatari mediators in the coming days.
Israeli officials said the delegation would be led, as usual, by David Barnea, the head of the Israeli intelligence agency, the Mossad.
The White House predicted that the Doha talks could convene as early as Friday. It said the Hamas proposal was in line with the three-stage peace deal that Biden outlined on 31 May, which has formally been accepted by the Israeli government and endorsed by the UN security council.
US officials had said an earlier Hamas response contained elements that were negotiable but some that were not. The White House reaction to Hamasâs new response was much more positive.
âI think the framework is now in place and we have to work out the implementation steps,â a senior US official said. âWhat we got back from Hamas was a pretty significant adjustment to what had been their position, and that is encouraging. We have heard the same from the Israelis.â
The official stressed that the agreement was not yet final, however. âThis does not mean this deal is going to be closed in a period of days. Thereâs significant work to be done on some of the implementation steps,â they said.
The main obstacle in negotiations until this week had been widely differing views on how the agreement would move from its first phase to its second.
The first phase involves the release by Hamas of elderly, sick and female hostages during a six-week truce, an Israeli withdrawal from Gazan cities, and the release of Palestinian detainees held by Israel.
The second phase would involve the release of all remaining hostages as well as the bodies of those who have died, a permanent end to hostilities and a full Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. Phase three would mark the start of Gazaâs reconstruction.
The transition from the first to the second phase was to be negotiated during the first six-week truce, and the ceasefire would continue as long as good-faith negotiations continued, but Hamas wanted stronger guarantees over the path to a permanent ceasefire.
Netanyahu had publicly cast doubt on whether that would happen, vowing to complete the destruction of the militia, which has run Gaza for nearly two decades and which launched a surprise attack on southern Israel on 7 October.
âSome of the key issues on the transition from phase one to phase two have really been a stumbling block. I think weâve had a breakthrough in that area,â the senior US official said, without giving details of the text presented by Hamas.
âBetween phase one and phase two ⦠you have to have conditions and arrangements in place. I think that is something that is obvious, but itâs something that Hamas has resisted,â they said, adding that Hamas had dropped its resistance to the imposition of conditions before reaching a permanent ceasefire.
The senior US official said many implementation issues to be negotiated in Doha involved âsome sequencing and then a release of detaineesâ.
âI have to say, given the recent developments, we do believe thereâs a pretty significant opening here, and we welcome the prime ministerâs readiness to try to seize that opening by empowering his negotiating team to engage directly in Doha over the coming days,â the official said.
Keir Starmer is on course to win a landslide UK election victory, returning Labour to power and bringing a crushing end to 14 years of Conservative rule.
The 10pm exit poll, compiled on behalf of the three main news broadcasters, predicted Labour would win 410 seats, securing a majority of 170, to the Conservatives’ 131.
The Liberal Democrats were expected to take 61 seats, the Scottish National party 10, Reform UK 13, Plaid Cymru four and the Greens two after Rishi Sunak surprised the country six weeks ago by calling a summer poll.
The results appeared to confirm that Labour’s “time for change” message struck a chord with voters after years of chaos and division under the Tories, including the Brexit vote and its fallout, the handling of the Covid pandemic and the Partygate scandal.
At the last general election in 2019, the Conservatives had a majority of 80, with 365 seats to Labour’s 203. The SNP won 48 seats and the Lib Dems had just 11.
If the exit poll is correct, Labour has secured a huge swing away from the Conservatives, who will have suffered their worst ever performance, and away from the SNP in Scotland, where John Swinney’s party will have been crushed.
Reform’s polling at 13 seats appears to suggest the hard-right party has squeezed the Conservative vote across the country, with Nigel Farage favourite to win the seat of Clacton in Essex on his eighth attempt to enter parliament.
It will pose a major challenge for the Starmer government who will have to work out a strategy for how to fight the rise of the populist right, a trend reflected across Europe.
The Liberal Democrats, who appear on course to quadruple their seat haul, are expected to have further dented the Tories by making gains across the south-west and home counties in the “blue wall”.
Starmer is set to be the fourth Labour leader to oust the Conservatives since the second world war, and the first Labour prime minister for 14 years. Rachel Reeves will become the UK’s first ever female chancellor in a new Labour government.
The exit poll suggests Labour has won back vast swathes of the north of England and Midlands known as the “red wall”, taken by the Tories in 2019, as well as making major inroads against the SNP in Scotland.
Starmer’s victory appeared to have fallen just short of Tony Blair’s historic 1997 win in which Labour won 418 seats and a majority of 179 seats. Starmer, like Blair, has fought the campaign on a platform of promising change after more than a decade of Tory rule.
Labour’s expected win marks a huge turnaround for the party, four years after Starmer took over as leader and less than five since Jeremy Corbyn led the party to a disastrous defeat, its worst result since the 1930s.
The exit poll also indicates the Conservatives have suffered a catastrophic wipeout, with their worst ever performance,losing dozens of seats they won for the first time in 2019 under Boris Johnson.
Voters appear to have punished the party for years of scandals under Johnson, the financial crisis caused by Liz Truss, and Sunak’s failure to keep his pledges to turn the country around.
The loss of office also follows a weak Conservative campaign by Sunak, marred by a gambling scandal and the prime minister’s early departure from a D-day ceremony, which led cabinet ministers to concede defeat even before polling day.
Starmer thanked those who voted for him, saying: “To everyone who has campaigned for Labour in this election, to everyone who voted for us and put their trust in our changed Labour party – thank you.”
Pat McFadden, Labour’s national campaign coordinator, said: “Keir Starmer’s transformation of the Labour party has been remarkable. He has put country before party and has transformed Labour from a party focused on itself to one back in the service of the British public.
“We have campaigned as a changed Labour party, ready to change Britain. Whatever has been claimed throughout the campaign, the Labour party has assumed nothing about the result and has worked tirelessly to bring our message of change to people across the country.
“Britain’s future was on the ballot at this election. And, if we are successful tonight, Labour will get to work immediately with our first steps for change.”
If the exit poll is correct, Sunak is likely to announce his resignation as prime minister on Friday morning before Starmer goes to Buckingham Palace to be officially anointed by King Charles as his successor.
Starmer is expected to give a short speech on the steps of Downing Street before beginning work on his first steps in government. Sources say they expect most, if not all, of the cabinet, to be appointed by the end of Friday, with more junior ministers being confirmed over the weekend and possibly early next week.
The party is holding a rally in London in the early hours of Friday morning – an event that could echo the party’s event to mark Blair’s victory at the Royal Festival Hall shortly after winning the 1997 election.
Starmer has said, however, that the celebrations are likely to be short-lived, with only a few weeks to begin legislating before parliament breaks for its summer recess.
The Labour leader said on the campaign trail this week that he would extend the parliamentary term to achieve more before recess, and warned his shadow ministers he expected immediate results.
“I’ve said to the shadow cabinet: ‘I don’t want you having a phone call or a meeting the day after the election that you could have had six months before the election,’” he said on Wednesday.
The new prime minister will then travel to the Nato summit in Washington DC next week – his first chance to position himself as a world leader.
At the same time, his ministers will already have started to roll out their plans for domestic reforms. Angela Rayner, the shadow housing and communities secretary, will begin work on a new draft of the national planning policy framework, while Ed Miliband will immediately overturn the de facto ban on onshore windfarms.
Labour then has less than two weeks before presenting its first package of legislation in the king’s speech, including legislation to bolster workers’ rights and to set up Great British Energy, the energy generation company at the heart of Labour’s green plans.
A meeting of the European Political Community will follow immediately afterwards in London – Starmer’s first chance to lobby officially for improved trading relations and to begin work on a new deal for cross-Channel asylum seekers.
Having led a tightly controlled campaign with little in the way of spontaneous interaction with the public or new policy ideas, Starmer is under pressure to spell out in greater detail how he intends to begin tackling problems ranging from Britain’s prisons crisis to record NHS waiting lists.
Reeves is likely to present her first budget in the autumn, where she is expected to announce Labour’s first tax policies, including tightening non-dom tax breaks, extending the oil and gas windfall tax and taxing private school fees.
Reeves has also drawn up plans for increases to capital gains tax and inheritance tax, as Labour looks to avoid swingeing public sector cuts that are implied by the current fiscal forecasts.
In a sign that Starmer was already mentally preparing for the shift to power, he told reporters on Wednesday: “I’m really pleased that four and a half years of work is being vindicated, because this has not been an easy gig.”
âItâs an urgent situation,â he said when asked for his thoughts on a parlous state of affairs that saw National Rally win 33% of the popular vote in last weekendâs first round. âWe cannot let our country fall into the hands of these people. It is pressing. We saw the results, itâs catastrophic. We really hope itâs going to change: that everyone is going to rally together, go and vote, and vote for the correct party.â
Hurricane Beryl is barrelling through the Cayman Islands after causing death and destruction in Jamaica.
The British overseas territory is bearing the brunt of the hurricane, which has been causing “utter devastation” in the Caribbean since Monday, when it almost destroyed parts of Grenada and St Vincent and the Grenadines.
Now a category 3 hurricane with wind speeds of up to 120mph (193km/h), Beryl has brought thunderstorms and gale forces winds to the Cayman Islands.
Earlier on Thursday, meteorologists said the hurricane was 50 miles south-west of Grand Cayman and moving away from the island. However, they issued strong reminders to stay sheltered until the all-clear was given.
On Wednesday, Beryl touched down in Jamaica, forcing airports to close and sending nearly 1,000 people into government-designated shelters.
The hurricane’s eyewall skirted Jamaica’s southern coast as a powerful category 4 storm, ripping off roofs, uprooting electric poles and trees and causing widespread flooding.
“It’s terrible. Everything’s gone. I’m in my house and scared,” said Amoy Wellington, a 51-year-old cashier who lives in Top Hill, a rural farming community in southern St Elizabeth parish. “It’s a disaster.”
According to the most recent reports, many people in the country are without water, and on Wednesday night, officials said 60% of the population was without electricity.
On Wednesday evening, there were reports of a man being washed away, and confirmation that a woman had died in the parish of Hanover after a tree toppled on her house, bringing the death toll to at least nine across the countries affected by the hurricane.
But officials in the multi-island countries of Grenada and St Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) have said the death toll could increase as they struggle to assess the damage on some islands.
In Venezuela, President Nicolás Maduro told state television three people had died, four were missing, and more than 8,000 homes had been damaged.
Mexico’s tourist centres of Cancún and the wider Yucatán peninsula lie in Beryl’s predicted path. Cancún’s airport was thronged with tourists hoping to catch the last flights out before the storm arrived. Workers filled bags with sand and boarded up doors and windows of businesses for protection.
Mexico’s defence ministry opened about 120 storm shelters and asked visitors to heed instructions on evacuation or other measures.
Beryl is the 2024 Atlantic season’s first hurricane and at its peak earlier this week was the earliest category 5 storm on record. The prime minister of SVG has decried a lack of political will in western Europe and the US to tackle the global climate crisis.
Scientists say human-caused climate breakdown has increased the occurrence of the most intense and destructive tropical storms, because warming oceans provide more energy and increase their strength.
As the storm charts its deadly course through the region, leaders are seeking support for what they describe as the “herculean effort to rebuild”.
The SVG prime minister, Ralph Gonsalves, expressed his concern about accessing grants to rebuild, while his Grenadian counterpart, Dickon Mitchell, told reporters he was hoping to trigger his country’s catastrophic risk insurance policy.
Since Monday, individuals, groups, countries and regional and international organisations, including the Caribbean Community (Caricom), the UN, and the Commonwealth, have pledged support to the devastated islands.
On Thursday, the Royal Navy said it would deploy its warship HMS Trent to deliver aid, including bottled water, basic emergency supplies, and equipment to the Cayman Islands.
King Charles has asked to be kept closely informed of the developing situation, and it is understood he will be making a substantial donation to the disaster recovery and relief efforts.
In a message to the people of the Caribbean who had been affected by Beryl, he said: “My family and I have been profoundly saddened to learn of the dreadful destruction caused by Hurricane Beryl across the Caribbean. Above all, we send our heartfelt condolences to the friends and families of those who have so cruelly lost their lives.
“I have seen the extraordinary spirit of resilience and solidarity that people across the Caribbean have shown in response to such destruction – a spirit which has been called upon too often – and so I also send my particular gratitude to the emergency services and volunteers who are supporting the rescue and recovery efforts.
“At this most difficult of times, please know that our most special thoughts and prayers are with all those whose lives, livelihoods and property have been so utterly devastated.”
âA broken-down pile of crapâ on the verge of âquitting the raceâ was Donald Trumpâs summation of Joe Biden in a surreptitiously filmed video leaked on Wednesday.
The clip, obtained by the Daily Beast, shows the 78-year-old former president sitting in a golf cart, holding a pile of cash, and with son Barron alongside, as he offers an analysis of the 2024 presidential campaign.
Trump asked a group off-camera: âHow did I do with the debate the other night?â before predicting that Biden would not seek re-election.
âHe just quit, you know â heâs quitting the raceâ, Trump said. âI got him out of the â and that means we have Kamala.â
The White House and most Democrats maintain Biden will remain the party nominee, though voter polls suggest that he has slipped six points behind Trump and that the vice-president, Kamala Harris, could be a stronger Democrat candidate in November.
âI think sheâs gonna be betterâ as an opponent, Trump continued in the video, but added: âSheâs so bad. Sheâs so patheticâ and appeared to say: âSheâs so fucking bad.â
Bidenâs campaign has denied he is stepping down. âAbsolutely not,â said the White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, on Wednesday. Several Democratic governors repeated the phrase âin it to win itâ after meeting with Biden.
The Trump campaign has not commented directly on the video but on Wednesday predicted the âtotal collapseâ of the Democratic party following Bidenâs poor debate performance and mounting calls for him to step aside.
The Biden-Harris campaign responded to the video in a statement: âThe American people have already seen low after low from Donald Trump,â it said, described the video as a ânew rock bottomâ for him.
The clip was leaked hours after the Trump campaign released its first attack ads against Harris, who is the most likely candidate to replace Biden if he decides to quit the race.
Leaked video and audio clips have previously been a source of embarrassment for Trump, including in 2016 with the notorious Access Hollywood tape in which he described women in vulgar terms and bragged about sexually harassing them.
In the latest video Trump expressed disdain for Bidenâs ability to deal with foreign adversaries, including Russiaâs president, Vladimir Putin, and Chinaâs president, Xi Jinping.
âCan you imagine that guy dealing with Putin?â Trump asked. âAnd the president of China â whoâs a fierce person. Heâs a fierce man, very tough guy. And they see him.â
The fastest birds in the world, peregrine falcons are sought after for racing and can sell for up to £250,000 in the Middle East. Poaching is a constant threat, with eggs and chicks stolen to supply the hidden market. Now, there are nationwide efforts under way to ring and take DNA from wild chicks – but just reaching their nests can be perilous