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No Writer
May 9
Keir Starmer must make changes in wake of crushing election defeat, ex-deputy leader warns

It comes after Labour suffered huge losses in the elections across England, Scotland and Wales. The party have so far lost more than 1,300 councillors across England - resulting in the loss of control of 37 local authorities - as well as the Senedd in Wales for the first time since its inception in 1999, and struggled in Scotland. Worrying too was that they faced attacks from either side of the political spectrum - with Reform UK and the Greens big winners. Politics latest: Reform surge as Labour suffer disastrous losses Speaking on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, Baroness Harman said: "There needs to be a consensus built and led by Keir Starmer about what the government is going to do differently, because more of the same is not acceptable. "The country is entitled to a government that actually delivers on its manifesto, but more than that, they're entitled to a government and a prime minister who gives them a sense of direction of where the country's going and hope for the future. "So it's not just about delivering the nuts and bolts, it's about a narrative, it's about telling the story where people can all feel the country's getting better." Read more from Sky News:Burnham allies demand Starmer set departure dateElections: Analysis in maps and charts There had been much talk in the lead up to the elections about Sir Keir possibly facing a leadership challenge if Labour performed poorly at the elections - with Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting, and Andy Burnham all thought to be frontrunners should one be triggered. However, despite the size of Labour's defeat becoming apparent on Saturday, a leadership challenge has yet to materialise. Sir Keir appeared defiant when he reflected on Labour's "very tough" results, insisting: "I'm not going to walk away from those challenges and plunge the country into chaos." 👉 Click here to listen to Electoral Dysfunction on your podcast app 👈 Baroness Harman said: "[He is] clearly determined to fulfil his responsibility, having been elected less than two years ago, to actually deliver the changes that he promised the country from his position of being prime minister. "And although there has been endless talk about challenges, none of us three on this podcast did think that it would materialise. "But that doesn't mean that there isn't a lot of concern, and it doesn't also mean that it doesn't have a very undermining effect on the government and very distracting. "I think that bearing in mind there clearly isn't going to be a challenge. A lot of people were saying 'well, we're not going to push him out now, but he'll have to be gone after the May election'. "Well, we're after the May election and there's no sign of a challenge." Baroness Harman said Labour MPs had a "choice" and the "choice surely that they should make is to be part of and help the government do better and deliver the change that they promised". She added: "But more than that, really listen and learn the lessons. But I think really that they need to move on from that to really a practical discussion of learning the lessons and a debate about the way forward."

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No Writer
May 8
King sends 'warmest congratulations' to Sir David Attenborough on his 100th birthday

The monarch said in a birthday card message how the pair have known each other for more than 60 years, having first met in 1958, and their "paths have crossed many times since". He was shown writing the card in a clip at the conservationist's birthday concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London. The 77-year-old royal said Sir David has revealed "the beauty and wonders of nature to audiences around the world in new and marvellous ways". He added that the broadcaster has shared the King's "determination to highlight the urgent need to protect and preserve" Earth for future generations. See pictures from Sir David's life The King said he and the Queen were "delighted" to learn he will be celebrating the milestone and on behalf of the whole country wished him a very happy birthday. Animals could then be seen delivering the letter across land, sea and air, before Sir David could be seen holding his royal birthday card aloft in the venue. The card's journey was initially thwarted by a fallen tree - only to be saved by the creatures, including an eagle, a fox, a red squirrel and an otter that travel across the UK to ensure that the wildlife presenter receives his royal dispatch. The Prince of Wales spoke of his "profound" friendship with Sir David, adding that his children have grown up with the broadcaster's "incredible storytelling" and that he has been a "guiding light" in efforts to protect the natural world. He said in his speech: "David, for decades, your voice has been a constant in our lives, guiding us through rainforests and oceans, over mountains and into the very fabric of life." The audience in the Royal Albert Hall all sang happy birthday at the conclusion of the event. The King and Queen also shared a carousel of photographs of Sir David on the official Royal Family Instagram account. The caption read: "Wishing Sir David Attenborough a very happy 100th birthday. Enjoy your special celebration this evening!" Read more from Sky News:'Never-before-seen' files on UFOs released by PentagonNew pictures of record European cocaine haul Sir David Beckham also marked Sir David's big day with a post on his Instagram account captioned: "Happy 100th Birthday to our National Treasure." Meanwhile, fellow environmentalist and Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio called Sir David "one of the most enduring champions of our shared planet" in an Instagram post. The Royal Albert Hall celebration was just one of many events to mark the broadcaster's birthday, including a takeover of the Piccadilly Lights in central London, displaying a birthday message for Sir David. The naturalist said he has been "completely overwhelmed" by goodwill messages and thanked well wishers "most sincerely".

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No Writer
May 9
Keir Starmer must make changes in wake of crushing election defeat, ex-deputy leader warns

It comes after Labour suffered huge losses in the elections across England, Scotland and Wales. The party have so far lost more than 1,300 councillors across England - resulting in the loss of control of 37 local authorities - as well as the Senedd in Wales for the first time since its inception in 1999, and struggled in Scotland. Worrying too was that they faced attacks from either side of the political spectrum - with Reform UK and the Greens big winners. Politics latest: Reform surge as Labour suffer disastrous losses Speaking on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, Baroness Harman said: "There needs to be a consensus built and led by Keir Starmer about what the government is going to do differently, because more of the same is not acceptable. "The country is entitled to a government that actually delivers on its manifesto, but more than that, they're entitled to a government and a prime minister who gives them a sense of direction of where the country's going and hope for the future. "So it's not just about delivering the nuts and bolts, it's about a narrative, it's about telling the story where people can all feel the country's getting better." Read more from Sky News:Burnham allies demand Starmer set departure dateElections: Analysis in maps and charts There had been much talk in the lead up to the elections about Sir Keir possibly facing a leadership challenge if Labour performed poorly at the elections - with Angela Rayner, Wes Streeting, and Andy Burnham all thought to be frontrunners should one be triggered. However, despite the size of Labour's defeat becoming apparent on Saturday, a leadership challenge has yet to materialise. Sir Keir appeared defiant when he reflected on Labour's "very tough" results, insisting: "I'm not going to walk away from those challenges and plunge the country into chaos." 👉 Click here to listen to Electoral Dysfunction on your podcast app 👈 Baroness Harman said: "[He is] clearly determined to fulfil his responsibility, having been elected less than two years ago, to actually deliver the changes that he promised the country from his position of being prime minister. "And although there has been endless talk about challenges, none of us three on this podcast did think that it would materialise. "But that doesn't mean that there isn't a lot of concern, and it doesn't also mean that it doesn't have a very undermining effect on the government and very distracting. "I think that bearing in mind there clearly isn't going to be a challenge. A lot of people were saying 'well, we're not going to push him out now, but he'll have to be gone after the May election'. "Well, we're after the May election and there's no sign of a challenge." Baroness Harman said Labour MPs had a "choice" and the "choice surely that they should make is to be part of and help the government do better and deliver the change that they promised". She added: "But more than that, really listen and learn the lessons. But I think really that they need to move on from that to really a practical discussion of learning the lessons and a debate about the way forward."

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No Writer
May 9
County Championship: Ben Stokes falls for 14 in Durham comeback as Glamorgan's Tom Norton takes hat-trick against Somerset

Somerset built a 125-run first innings lead having dismissed the hosts for 229, only for Norton to take the plaudits after becoming the first player in 120 years to a claim a hat-trick on his County Championship debut. Norton removed opener James Rew for a duck in the fifth over, which was followed by the wickets of Tom Lammonby and then Archie Vaughan in the following deliveries to reduce the visitors to 7-3. Latest County Championship scorecards What cricket is on Sky Sports?Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with NOWChoose the Sky Sports push notifications you want Will Smeed also fell to Norton in the final over of the day as Somerset laboured to 32-6 at the close, a lead of 157, with Ryan Hadley (2-3) also impressing and Tom Abell ending the day unbeaten on 15. England Test captain Ben Stokes was dismissed for just 14 as he continued his return for Durham in their Division Two clash at Worcestershire. Stokes had taken two wickets on the opening day in his first outing since the Ashes, but saw hopes of making a solid innings with the bat come up short as he was out for 14 from 17 balls, edging 20-year-old Jack Home to second slip. Worcestershire had earlier pushed on from 209-7 to reach 308 all out, with Home having contributed a determined unbeaten 63. Durham ended 207-6, with David Bedingham making 83 and Graham Clark 48 not out. England white-ball captain Harry Brook missed out on a half-century as Warwickshire fought back against Yorkshire in their Division One match at Edgbaston. Brook, slotting into the side in place of the resting Joe Root, had resumed on 29, but could only reach 40 before he was bowled by Ethan Bamber. Yorkshire, at 110-4 overnight, swiftly collapsed to 152 all out. Olly Hannon-Dalby finished with four wickets - including skipper Jonny Bairstow for a run-a-ball 25 - and Jordan Thompson taking three in a blistering 4.2 over spell. Warwickshire ended the day at 267-3, after half-centuries from Rob Yates (81) and Dan Mousley (70). Jimmy Anderson took four wickets for Lancashire against Middlesex at Old Trafford, finishing with 4-67 in 16 overs as the visitors were dismissed for 169. Lancashire finished the day on 45-3, leading by 77 runs, with all three wickets taken by Ryan Higgins. Defending champions Nottinghamshire posted 415 in their first innings against Surrey at Trent Bridge. Centurion Joe Clarke could not add to his overnight 129 as he was caught behind before Surrey eventually got the last two wickets, with veteran seamer Dan Worrall finishing on 6-73. Surrey went on to reach 211-4 in reply after half-centuries for Dom Sibley (77) and Dan Lawrence (52 not out). At Chelmsford, Simon Harmer produced an unbeaten 80 to add late runs for Essex, who reached 273 all out against Hampshire. Nick Gubbins (35 not out) helped the visitors to 58-2, a lead of 20. Dan Hughes (136) hit a century for Sussex against Leicestershire at Hove. John Simpson was unbeaten on 89 in the home side's 386-8 which put them into a 58-run lead. Elsewhere in Division Two, Kent trail Gloucestershire by 17 runs at Bristol. Zak Crawley was out for one before Ben Dawkins (65), Ben Muyeye (90) and captain Daniel Benjamin's unbeaten 74 pushed Kent on to 308-8. Derbyshire piled on the runs against Northamptonshire, reaching 604-7 declared with Martin Andersson (104) and Brooke Guest (141) both making centuries. Northamptonshire were 98-4 at stumps. Watch England's home international summer live on Sky Sports, starting with a three-Test series against New Zealand from June 4. Not got Sky? Stream cricket contract-free on NOW.

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No Writer
May 9
Myanmar miners discover rare 11,000-carat ruby weighing nearly five pounds

The ruby, pictured sitting at the president office in Naypyidaw, weighs around 2.2 kilograms, or 4.8 pounds. It was unearthed near the town of Mogok, in the upper Mandalay region, the heartland of the Asian nation's lucrative gem-mining industry. The area has recently experienced intense fighting in the country's wide-ranging civil war. The rough ruby was discovered in April, just after the traditional New Year festival, according to a report from the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar. It is considered to be the second-largest by weight ever found in the country, according to state media. While it weighs half the weight of a 21,450-carat stone found in 1996, weighing 4.29kg, or 9.45lbs, the newest discovery is considered to be more valuable due to its superior colour and quality. The ruby is described as having a purplish-red hue with yellowish undertones, along with a high-quality colour grade, moderate transparency and a highly reflective surface. Myanmar produces as much as 90% of the world's rubies, which are primarily from the areas of Mogok and Mong Hsu. Gemstones are a major source of revenue for Myanmar. Read more:Pedestrian killed after being hit by planeMystery boat seized by Greek police But human rights activists and organisations, including Britain-based research and lobbying group Global Witness, have urged jewellers to stop purchasing gems sourced from Myanmar, which they say has served as a vital revenue stream for its military governments over several decades. A new, seemingly civilian government was installed this year, but followed elections described by human rights and opposition groups as a sham. The election returned President Min Aung Hlaing, the army chief who led the most recent military takeover in 2021, to power. At his office in the capital, he and his cabinet examined the giant ruby.

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No Writer
May 8
White House calls Mark Hamill 'sick individual' for Trump grave post

The White House's Rapid Response account on X called Hamill "one sick individual" for the Bluesky post, which featured an AI-generated image showing the US president lying with his eyes closed, surrounded by daisies. The image was captioned "If Only" and had a gravestone that read: "Donald J. Trump 1946-2024." Mr Hamill, famous for starring as Luke Skywalker in the Star Wars films and an outspoken critic of the Republican president, had posted the image on his official account. He wrote: "He should live long enough to witness his inevitable devastating loss in the midterms, be held accountable for his unprecedented corruption, impeached, convicted & humiliated for his countless crimes. "Long enough to realise he'll be disgraced in the history books, forevermore." In response, the White House's Rapid Response account posted: "This kind of rhetoric is exactly what has inspired three assassination attempts in two years against our President." Mr Hamill then deleted the post and apologised, adding in a separate message: "Actually, I was wishing him the opposite of dead, but apologise if you found the image inappropriate." It comes after a man was charged with the attempted assassination of Mr Trump in a shooting at the White House Correspondents' Association dinner in Washington DC last month. In the days after the shooting, the president, Melania Trump and other US officials demanded TV comedian Jimmy Kimmel be fired from his ABC show. He joked that the first lady had a "glow like an expectant widow" in a sketch parodying the dinner before the event took place. Despite being filmed before the shooting, Mrs Trump said Kimmel's "hateful and violent rhetoric" intends to divide the US, and added: "It is time for ABC to take a stand. "How many times will ABC's leadership enable Kimmel's atrocious behaviour at the expense of our community?" Kimmel responded to criticism of his joke by saying it was merely a reference to the couple's age difference, before saying on air: "I agree that hateful and violent rhetoric is something ⁠we should reject. "I do, and I think a great place to start to dial that back would be to have a conversation with your husband about it." Read more from Sky News:Teen spared jail after £100,000 shoplifting spreeSuperdry co-founder jailed for raping womanPurported suicide note left by Epstein released The Federal Communications Commission has since opened an early licence review of Disney's eight ABC television stations. The FCC's chairman Brendan Carr has denied the review was because of pressure from the White House.

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Professor Will Jennings, Sky News election analyst, and the Sky News Data x Forensics team
May 8
Elections: Analysis in maps and charts, and find out the result from your seat

In Wales, Plaid Cymru held off Reform to become the largest party in the Senedd for the first time. The SNP lost votes in Scotland but remain the largest party. Both parties will need to work with others to hold a majority, however. Sky News' National Equivalent Vote (NEV) is an estimate of each party's vote share in England council elections projected into a nationwide vote. Reform lead on 27% of the vote, with the Conservatives in second with 20%. That is an improvement for the Tories compared with last year's local elections, while Reform have slid backwards slightly. Labour are in third, with just three points separating them from both the Greens and the Lib Dems. Across English local elections, Reform have gained over 1,300 council seats and 13 councils, mostly at the expense of Labour who are down over 1,200 seats and have lost more than 30 councils. For the first time, Sky is able to bring you the results from your specific seat. Search for your postcode below, or click or tap around the map to explore detailed results: The Conservatives have also suffered heavy losses, and have lost nearly 500 seats and eight councils. The Lib Dems have gained almost 800 seats and 13 councils, while the Greens have gained more than 300 seats and four councils. See the latest results here Sky's election expert Professor Michael Thrasher has projected a redistribution of each party's seats in the House of Commons elected in July 2024, based on the NEV. The result is a hung parliament with no single party able to pass the threshold of 326 seats required for an overall majority, but with Reform as the largest party. Reform UK would win 284 seats, 42 seats short of a majority. Labour would win 110 seats compared to 96 seats for the Conservatives, despite winning a smaller vote share. The Liberal Democrats would come fourth with 80 seats, followed by the SNP winning 36 seats. Plaid Cymru and the Greens are each projected to win 13 seats. More than 40 councils have changed hands in what was a dramatic and historic election night. The British election map has been re-drawn again, and the multi-party politics era will leave many councils attempting to operate with complex coalitions or minority administrations. Scotland and Welsh devolved elections Elections for devolved parliaments in Scotland and Wales delivered significant blows for Labour and the Conservatives, while nationalist parties and Reform performed well. The Senedd elections in Wales were dominated by Plaid Cymru and Reform, both of whom have taken approximately a third of the vote each and seen significant gains. These gains have largely been at the cost of Labour and the Conservatives, who have both seen lowest-ever vote shares in the Senedd - with Labour ending up at just 11.5%, down 24 points from the last elections in 2021, and the Conservatives at 11%. Eluned Morgan, leader of the Welsh Labour Party, resigned on Friday after losing her own seat in the Senedd. Turnout in Wales this year was the highest on record since Senedd elections began in 1999, at 51.6%, and the first time that more than half of the electorate turned up to vote. By contrast, turnout in Scotland dropped significantly since 2021 - down 10% to 53% - but is more in line with pre-2016 levels. Holyrood's electoral system gives people two votes: one for a specific candidate to be a constituency member of Scottish Parliament (MSP), and another regional vote, which goes towards a wider party or independent candidate. The SNP remained the largest party with 58 seats, with one regional MSP and the rest constituency-based. But the party fell short of a majority, and its their constituency vote share was down 9.2% from the last elections in 2021. As in England and Wales, Nigel Farage's Reform UK has seen the biggest jump in vote share, to 15.8%, making it the third largest party in vote share and tying with Labour for 17 seats. It failed to gain any constituency seats but won the highest number of regional seats. Though Labour's performance (19.2%) may be poor for a party which once ruled Holyrood, its drop in vote share since 2021 is minimal (-2.4%) compared with the Conservatives (-10.1%). Where are Labour doing worst? The seats where Labour were strongest previously - what would have been considered their heartlands - are where Labour are losing worst. A particular spotlight for Sir Keir Starmer is London, where votes are still being counted for some boroughs. Labour previously held control of 21 boroughs in the capital. So far, Labour has lost control of nearly half the boroughs (nine) - two to the Greens, Westminster to the Conservatives, and six to no overall control. Across London, Labour has lost over 350 council seats while the Greens gained over 200 so far. Where are Reform doing best? It's the opposite story for Reform. They are picking up most votes in areas with older voters and places where fewer people went to university, as well as areas where lots of voters backed Brexit. Their coalition of support appears similar to those voters Boris Johnson was able to win from Labour in his 2019 general election victory. Sir Keir Starmer won some of these areas back in 2024, but they appear to have rejected him now. May elections - follow live How are the Conservatives getting on? The government aren't the only losers. The official opposition have also lost over 500 seats and control of Essex and Newcastle-under-Lyme to Reform, but will still have been buoyed by reclaiming Westminster council from Labour. Similarly to Labour, they are losing most votes in areas where they used to be strongest. They are also losing to Reform in older areas and places where lots of people voted for Brexit. How about the Lib Dems? Sir Ed Davey's party has taken control of Stockport and Portsmouth, and increased its majorities in the south London councils of Richmond-upon-Thames and Sutton. Sutton, where a majority of voters backed Brexit in 2016, used to be a Lib Dem/Tory marginal. Now it's almost a one-party state. Richmond is now literally a one-party state - the Lib Dems now hold all 54 seats there. What about the Greens? The Greens have surged in popularity since Zack Polanski was elected their leader in September last year. They too were expected to make significant gains at these elections. They have won control of four councils - Hastings, Hackney, Norwich, and Waltham Forest, the last two which they gained from Labour. Some areas where the Greens were expected to do best are still due to count their votes. The Greens have performed well in London council mayoral elections, taking both Hackney and Lewisham from Labour. There were holds for Labour in Newham, for the Conservatives in Croydon, for the Lib Dems in Watford, and for Lutfur Rahman's Aspire party in Tower Hamlets. The Data and Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.

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No Writer
May 9
Man City 3-0 Brentford: Keith Andrews baffled by decision not to give Bees second-half penalty as three decisions go Pep Guardiola's way

On 71 minutes, with the scoreline at 1-0 to City, Kevin Schade went down under Matheus Nunes' challenge and referee Michael Salisbury did not give the penalty - with VAR James Bell not overturning the decision. It was one of three major decisions which went against Brentford during the match as City went on to win 3-0 and move within two points of Premier League leaders Arsenal, who play West Ham on Sunday, live on Sky Sports. Man City 3-0 Brentford - Match report & highlightsAs it happened | Teams | StatsLive Premier League table | Watch FREE PL highlights "I thought Kevin Schade's one in the second half was a penalty. So that was really disappointing," said Andrews to Sky Sports. He later added in his press conference: "In what world he goes down unless there's contact is beyond me. Because there's a goal to get us back to 1-1. That's the one that I'm struggling to comprehend. "The comment I heard was 'not enough contact'. But someone who is as quick as Kevin Schade, with his eyes on goal, I'm not sure how much contact he [the referee] is looking for. Especially with how quick Kev is and the nature of it." Reacting to the decision, Sky Sports pundit and former Man City defender Micah Richards said: "It's difficult - it was one of those decisions where had it been given on field, they're not going to overturn it. But because they didn't give it on field they're also not going to overturn it. "Schade might have clipped his own leg when he's running. There must have been a little bit of contact - but it's a difficult one for the officials. It's almost like his right foot hits the knee of Nunes and then he clips himself." Should Bernardo have seen red for swing at Collins? One of the other two major decisions that went against Brentford was an apparent swing of the arm by City captain Bernardo Silva and Brentford's Nathan Collins. After Collins had won a goal kick for Brentford, an angry Bernardo appeared to hit Collins' leg with his arm when on the floor. Alan Smith, on Sky Sports co-commentary duty, said: "Some of the Brentford players aren't happy at Silva. He's swung an arm." Referee Salisbury booked Bernardo for "adopting an aggressive attitude" - but did it constitute violent conduct? According to the FA's Laws of the Game, violent conduct is when a player uses or attempts to use excessive force or brutality against an opponent when not challenging for the ball, or against a team-mate, team official, match official, spectator or any other person, regardless of whether contact is made. Brentford captain Collins, who did not react to the incident after the game, said City got confidence from the decisions going in their favour. Should Nunes have seen red in the first half? Nunes and Schade were also involved in a major decision in the first half. Schade broke through on goal and went down under the City right-back's challenge - with referee Salisbury not giving a foul in favour of the Brentford forward. Replays showed Nunes got a slight touch on the ball, which may have saved Nunes from getting a red card for denying a clear goalscoring opportunity in the first half. "The first half one, I haven't seen that one back," said Andrews. "The coaches have said there might have been a bit of contact on the ball. If that's the case, fair enough." Sky Sports pundit Richards added: "Nunes was very lucky that he got the slightest touch on the ball. Otherwise he's going off."

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