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England suffer big Six Nations blow with Feyi-Waboso ruled out of Wales clash

about 5 hours ago
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England have suffered a major setback on the eve of their Six Nations opener against Wales on Saturday with Immanuel Feyi-Waboso ruled out with a hamstring injury, prompting a surprise recall for Tom Roebuck.Roebuck is the beneficiary of Feyi-Waboso’s injury, called into the side to make a first appearance since picking up a toe injury in England’s November victory over the All Blacks.England are still investigating the extent of Feyi-Waboso’s knock – sustained in training on Thursday – and it remains to be seen if he will feature at all in the Six Nations.“[Manny] pulled out of training in the last 60 seconds and unfortunately won’t be available this weekend,” said the England assistant coach Tom Harrison.“He sustained pulled muscle in the leg area.

Does it disrupt some plans? Yes it does because it’s changing a player.But we’ve done everything we can to make sure the next player is ready.”The head coach, Steve Borthwick, had said that Roebuck was “a week or so” from full fitness when omitting him from the initial matchday squad earlier in the week, suggesting he was on track to make his comeback against Scotland next week, but the Sale wing has received the nod over Elliot Daly.“Steve said the other day [Tom would] be ready in a couple of days,” added Harrison.“In an ideal world, we’d have given him an extra week but the world isn’t ideal as we know.

He trained fully yesterday and he’s been exceptional around the squad.I’m excited to see him go.”Feyi-Waboso’s absence is a blow for Borthwick given the Exeter wing has been in fine form for club and country this season.He started all four autumn Tests, scoring two tries in England’s 100% winning campaign and re-establishing himself on the international stage after missing last year’s Six Nations with a shoulder injury.The 23-year-old represented Wales under-18s before pledging his allegiance to England but his late withdrawal means he is still yet to appear against Saturday’s opponents.

“Any player would be disappointed with an injury,” said the England back-rower Sam Underhill.“We’re gutted for him.He’s a very emotionally resilient guy, he’s a hard-working guy.Anyone doing a medical degree and playing rugby probably has a level of resilience anyway.He’s a good guy, no doubt he’ll be back better for it but yeah, it’s disappointing.

”Despite Roebuck’s lack of game time and question marks over his fitness, he has proved himself an impressive operator on the international stage.He started the autumn victories against Australia and New Zealand, scoring the fourth and final try against the All Blacks, having cemented his spot on the right wing in last year’s thumping victory over Wales in Cardiff.Borthwick has called up the Bristol prop Max Lahiff into his squad to bolster front-row numbers with the Bath youngster Billy Sela absent due to injury.Despite the disruption, England are red-hot favourites to extend their winning run to 12 matches, with Wales on a Six Nations losing streak that dates back to 2023.The England captain, Jamie George, is expecting a fearsome challenge against their great rivals, however.

“It’s hostile.There’s confrontation.They are tough games,” said George.“You feel it in the stadiums you play at, whether that’s the Allianz or the Principality.It’s like there’s a different energy in the crowd and that plays into the way the game is played and it’s so confrontational.

That’s why they are great games to be part of.”
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Home Office says nearly 60,000 people deported from UK or left voluntarily since 2024 election

Nearly 60,000 unauthorised migrants and convicted criminals have been removed or deported from the UK since Labour took office, the Home Office has said.The announcement came amid claims that the government was promoting “harmful stereotypes” by equating migration with criminality.Officials said the figure was the highest number in a decade.The department said 15,200 people who were in the UK illegally were removed since the 2024 election – a 45% increase on the previous 19 months.A statement said 43,000 people left voluntarily after being told they were in the UK illegally

about 20 hours ago
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No 10 defies calls to sack Morgan McSweeney over Mandelson appointment

Downing Street has defied calls to remove Keir Starmer’s most senior aide, insisting Morgan McSweeney retains the prime minister’s confidence, as frustration grows over a wait for documents on Peter Mandelson, which some fear could last for weeks.Amid warnings from Labour backbenchers that McSweeney’s survival would leave Starmer’s position “untenable”, Starmer apologised to victims of Jeffrey Epstein for appointing Mandelson, a close friend of the convicted child sex offender, as US ambassador.A day after a chaotic Commons deal to release vetting papers over Mandelson’s appointment left many Labour MPs mutinous, there was still fury about the role of McSweeney, the PM’s chief of staff.One Labour MP said: “People want [McSweeney] to go, more than ever before. The current situation is unsustainable

about 22 hours ago
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How the Epstein scandal has shaken the British government to its core

It was the one scandal that Donald Trump seemed unable to shake. No matter his best efforts to convince his supporter base that there was nothing to see here, the demands for the administration to release every document it had on the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein only grew.Yet even after the most shocking revelations in the latest drop about Trump’s inner circle – involving everyone from Elon Musk to the Maga honcho Steve Bannon to the commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, not to mention Trump himself – so far, it seems, the administration has escaped largely unscathed. Nobody has resigned, nobody has been fired, and certainly there is no sign that the US president is going anywhere.There is, however, one political establishment that the Epstein scandal has shaken to its core – in the UK, where revelations in the files have sent a shock wave through the governing party that threatens to topple it entirely

about 23 hours ago
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Calls to halt UK Palantir contracts grow amid ‘lack of transparency’ over deals

Labour should halt public contracts with the US tech company Palantir, opposition politicians have said, amid growing concern at the lack of government transparency over dealings with the company and Peter Mandelson.Since 2023, Palantir has secured more than £500m in contracts with the NHS and the Ministry of Defence (MoD), while it employed Global Counsel, the lobbying firm founded by Mandelson. Emails released by the US Department of Justice show Mandelson sought help from Jeffrey Epstein to find “rich individuals” as clients.The government has for months blocked attempts by MPs and campaigners to scrutinise Palantir’s deals. Requests for information about meetings between the company’s leadership with Keir Starmer and the former prime minister Boris Johnson were among those that have been refused

about 23 hours ago
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‘If someone had pulled the trigger’: MPs rue lack of challenger to oust Starmer

The most dangerous moment of Keir Starmer’s premiership came just after lunchtime on Wednesday, when mutiny was the talk of the Commons tea room.Anger is widespread across Labour – but it was at its most palpable among the party’s new MPs, as the Conservatives used a humble address to force the disclosure of the vetting documents and communications linked to Peter Mandelson, disgraced by his close association with Jeffrey Epstein.“At about 2pm yesterday, if someone had pulled the trigger, we would have moved,” one 2024 intake MP said on Thursday. “No one dared. I think that says a lot

1 day ago
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Lord Triesman obituary

The wide-ranging diversity of the employment and pursuits in the packed public life of David Triesman, Lord Triesman, who has died aged 82, was fuelled by a visionary idealism he first displayed as a teenage schoolboy and which he thereafter sustained throughout a rollercoaster ride in sport, business and politics.He began his working life as an academic, spent nearly two decades as a trade union leader, ran the Labour party as general secretary for two years in the troubled run-up to the Iraq war from 200103 and then became a government minister in the House of Lords. A qualified senior football referee who had played for Tottenham Hotspur’s youth team in the 1960s, he served as chair of the Football Association from 2008 to 2010. He remained an active member of the Lords and numerous public bodies, and in 2011 founded his own consultancy dealing in property and private equity.In a letter he wrote from Labour’s headquarters as general secretary in 2003, he sought to re-engage the political commitment of disaffected party members, after the early shine of the Blair government was dimmed with disillusion, by defining his own lifelong fervour for a fairer world

1 day ago
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Price of average UK home passes £300,000 for first time, Halifax says

about 10 hours ago
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Almost a quarter of soup on sale in UK supermarkets has too much salt, study finds

about 12 hours ago
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TikTok could be forced to change app’s ‘addictive design’ by European Commission

about 6 hours ago
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Deepfake fraud taking place on an industrial scale, study finds

about 10 hours ago
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House of ice on a warming planet: Italy’s turn for the Olympics winter mirage

about 3 hours ago
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My simple message for England: get the ball into Arundell’s hands early against Wales | Ugo Monye

about 3 hours ago