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Sunak ‘considers matter closed’ after home secretary apologises for date rape joke

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No action will be taken against James Cleverly over his date rape joke as the prime minister “considers the matter closed”.

The home secretary has been facing calls to quit after joking about putting a date rape drug in his wife’s drink – hours after the Home Office announced plans to crack down on spiking.

Mr Cleverly apologised for the remarks but has faced calls to resign by a women’s charity while Labour accused Rishi Sunak of an “absence of leadership, accountability and integrity” for failing to take action against him.

Asked for the prime minister’s thoughts on the comment, his official spokeswoman said it was “right that the home secretary apologised”.

She added: “The prime minister considers the matter closed and he and the home secretary are focused on the action that the government is taking to tackle spiking and protect women and girls.”

Read more:Drink spiking laws to be modernised, Home Office says

She said she was not aware of Mr Sunak and Mr Cleverly having spoken about the incident.

More on James Cleverly

File photo dated 23/01/23 of a general view of the Houses of Parliament in London. The Government in Westminster's dominance over national decision-making and politicians' use of "muscular unionism" rhetoric risks undermining public support for maintaining the UK as a single state, research by a think tank the Institute for Public Policy Research suggests.

Tax cuts, a new PM and a Nigel Farage comeback – what 2024 could have in store for UK politics

James Cleverly and his wife Susannah Cleverly arrive to attend a state dinner in honor of Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla at the Chateau de Versailles (Versailles Palace) in Versailles

Calls for Home Secretary James Cleverly to quit after ‘sickening’ joke about spiking his wife’s drink

Home Secretary James Cleverly arriving in Downing Street, London, for a Cabinet meeting. Picture date: Tuesday December 19, 2023.

James Cleverly’s climbdown over family visas looks like a hasty, panic retreat

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James Cleverly

Asked whether Mr Sunak was concerned about the type of message the remarks might give to victims of spiking, his spokeswoman reiterated that Mr Sunak and Mr Cleverly were focused on taking “action”, adding: “That is why we made sure that existing laws recognise the threat that spiking poses to women and girls.

“And that is why we set out also a raft of measures to offer immediate support to victims, alongside mandatory training for doormen, investing in research for rapid testing kits – all announced by the Home Office in a package just last week.

“So our focus is on making sure that we are taking the action required to protect women and girls.”

Mr Cleverly made the comments during a private conversation at a Number 10 reception.

The home secretary told female guests “a little bit of Rohypnol in her drink every night” was “not really illegal if it’s only a little bit”, the Sunday Mirror reported.

Mr Cleverly also laughed that the secret to a long marriage was ensuring your spouse was “someone who is always mildly sedated so she can never realise there are better men out there”.

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Conversations at Downing Street receptions are usually understood to be “off the record”, but the Sunday Mirror decided to break that convention because of Mr Cleverly’s position and the subject matter.

Allies of the cabinet minister said his comments were made in a private setting but he recognises they were inappropriate.

A spokesman for the home secretary said: “In what was always understood as a private conversation, James, the home secretary tackling spiking, made what was clearly meant to be an ironic joke – for which he apologises.”

However, his apology was not well received by the Fawcett Society chief executive Jemima Olchawski, who called it “sickening” that “the senior minister in charge of keeping women safe thinks that something as terrifying as drugging women is a laughing matter”.

She said: “How can we trust him to seriously address violence against women and girls? We deserve better than this from our lawmakers and Cleverly should resign.”

Labour turned the heat on to Mr Sunak’s leadership, with shadow home office minister Alex Davies Jones saying: “The country deserves so much better.

“There is an absence of leadership, accountability and integrity in this government and we’re all paying the price.”

Labour’s shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said: “Across the country there will be young victims whose lives have been devastated by spiking attacks over the festive period.

“Yet neither the prime minister nor the home secretary seem to understand the seriousness of this vile crime, or how damaging it is for the confidence of victims that the cabinet minister in charge of tackling violence against women and girls is making jokes about spiking in this way.

“Ministers need to set out what they are going to do to rebuild trust and ensure everyone takes this vile crime seriously rather than dismissing the incident as ‘case closed'”.

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James Cleverly

Celebrity deaths 2023: The famous faces and notable figures we said goodbye to this year

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As the year draws to a close, it is a time to commemorate those we have lost in the last 12 months.

Music icons including Tina Turner, Burt Bacharach and Sinead O’Connor are among the famous faces who sadly died in 2023, along with stars of stage and screen such as Raquel Welch, Matthew Perry and Sir Michael Gambon, and sporting legends Sir Bobby Charlton, Terry Venables and Gianluca Vialli.

Other celebrities who died this year include Paul O’Grady and Barry Humphries, along with well known names from the worlds of politics and business, such as Mohamed Al Fayed and Silvio Berlusconi.

As 2023 comes to an end, here’s a look back at the lives and careers of those from the worlds of music, film, TV, fashion, sport, royalty, politics and business who we’ve said goodbye to.

JANUARY

One of the most influential rock singers of the 1960s and 1970s, American singer-songwriter David Crosby co-founded both The Byrds and Crosby, Stills And Nash – later Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.

He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a member of both groups, and also released several records as a solo performer.

Crosby died at the age of 81, following a long illness, with his wife, Jan, saying in tribute: “Although he is no longer here with us, his humanity and kind soul will continue to guide and inspire us. His legacy will continue to live on through his legendary music.”

British rock legend Jeff Beck rose to fame with The Yardbirds and went on to become a solo star who incorporated hard rock, jazz, blues and even opera into his music.

Known for his love of improvising, he won eight Grammy awards and like Crosby was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame twice. In 2022, he released a collaborative album with his friend Johnny Depp, who was one of the many varied performers – including Luciano Pavarotti, Rod Stewart, Macy Gray, Chrissie Hynde, Joss Stone, Imelda May and Cyndi Lauper – he worked with over the years.

“I don’t care about the rules,” Beck once said when describing his music style. “In fact, if I don’t break the rules at least 10 times in every song then I’m not doing my job properly.”

He died aged 78 after “suddenly contracting bacterial meningitis”, his family said in a statement, with stars including Kiss’s Gene Simmons, Queen’s Brian May and Rolling Stones stars Mick Jagger and Ronnie Wood paying tribute.

Italian football hero Gianluca Vialli was the son of a self-made millionaire, who grew up in a mansion in Lombardy – but money could not buy his natural skill as a footballer.

He was best known in the UK for his time with Chelsea, the club for which he scored 40 goals in 88 games between 1996 and 1999. He then became manager – winning the FA Cup with the club in both roles. Before his move to London he had played for Juventus, who signed him in what was a record deal back in 1992.

Following his death, aged 58, tributes described a hugely skiled footballer – but also a beloved man. His former teammate Graeme Souness, who played alongside him at Sampdoria, told Sky Sports: “I can’t tell you how good a guy he was. Forget football, he was just a gorgeous soul. He was just a truly nice human being.”

Obituary: Italy says goodbye to a footballing genius

As the only child of the “King of Rock ‘n’ Roll”, Lisa Marie Presley was the sole heir to her father’s Graceland estate and seemed destined to a life of music royalty.

She went on to have her own career in the spotlight, scoring two US Top 10 albums, and was famously married to both Michael Jackson and Nicholas Cage. But her life was beset by tragedy, including the loss of her son in 2020.

Presley died aged 54 after suffering a cardiac arrest at her home in Calabasas, California, with her mother Priscilla describing her as “the most passionate, strong and loving woman I have ever known”.

Read more: The tragic life of Lisa Marie Presley

Yorkshire-born actor Julian Sands was best known for his roles in films including A Room With A View, Arachnophobia, Leaving Las Vegas, and Warlock, as well as TV appearances in 24, Smallville and Banshee.

In the years before his death, he had appeared in one-man stage shows reciting the poetry of Harold Pinter, John Keats and Percy Shelley.

A keen hiker and mountaineer, the 65-year-old was reported missing in January 2023 after he failed to return from a trek in the Mount Baldy region of the San Gabriel mountains in California. His death was not confirmed until June, when his remains were discovered.

Giving a newspaper interview in 2020, Sands said he was happiest when he was “close to a mountain summit on a glorious cold morning”.

Obituary: ‘Endearing, eccentric and fearless’ actor died ‘doing what he loved’

Other stars and notable figures who died in January 2023 include:

Supermodel Tatjana Patitz, one of the five stars of George Michael’s Freedom videoRapper Gangsta BooFounding Motown artist Barrett StrongEarth, Wind & Fire drummer Fred WhiteItalian actress Gina Lollobrigida‘Grande Dame’ of British cinema Sylvia SimsRally driver and YouTube star Ken BlockWednesday Addams actress Lisa Loring24 star Annie WerschingAuthor Fay WeldonBachman-Turner Overdrive drummer Robbie Bachman

FEBRUARY

One of the greatest songwriters of the 20th century, Burt Bacharach penned more than 500 tracks – which went on to be performed by more than 1,200 different artists – across his seven-decade career. They include Magic Moments, I Just Don’t Know What To Do With Myself, Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head, I Say A Little Prayer, Walk On By, Close To You, to name just a handful of his accomplishments.

A skilled pianist as well as a composer, he was a six-time Grammy winner and three-time Oscar winner whose talent earned him comparisons with music greats including George Gershwin, Cole Porter and Richard Rodgers. Over the years he collaborated or wrote for everyone, from Dionne Warwick and Aretha Franklin to Tom Jones and even Dr Dre.

Remixes and samples of his work kept him in the public consciousness long after he stopped turning out the hits, as did Hollywood’s use of many of his tunes in film soundtracks.

Chuck Jackson, an American R&B singer who was one of the first artists to record material by Bacharach and lyricist Hal David successfully, died just days after the composer, aged 85. Bacharach died at the age of 94, with tributes paid by artists of all ages. “RIP Maestro,” wrote Noel Gallagher in his. “It was a pleasure to have known you.”

Obituary: The composer who soundtracked generations

Raquel Welch was a Hollywood bombshell whose career spanned more than 50 years, including 30 films and dozens of TV series and appearances.

She won a Golden Globe for best actress in 1975 for her role in The Three Musketeers, and appeared in hit films including Legally Blonde later in her career.

However, thanks to its iconic publicity still featuring Welch in a deer-skin bikini, it is her role in the 1966 prehistoric adventure fantasy One Million Years BC she will be most remembered for, despite having just a few lines of dialogue in the film.

The star died aged 82 after a short illness, her management company said, and had been suffering with Alzheimer’s disease.

De La Soul are regarded as one of the most innovative groups in rap history, and David Jude Jolicoeur – known as Trugoy the Dove and pictured centre above – was one of the founding members, alongside Kelvin “Posdnuos” Mercer and Vincent “Maseo” Mason.

Their debut studio album 3 Feet High And Rising was praised as a light-hearted and positive counterpart to harder rap offerings at the time of its release in 1989; sampling everyone from Johnny Cash and Steely Dan to Hall & Oates, De La Soul signalled the beginning of alternative hip-hop.

Jolicoeur, who died at the age of 54, five years after revealing he was suffering from congenitive heart failure, also co-wrote songs including Gorillaz’s Feel Good Inc. His death came just a month after it was announced that De La Soul’s classic back catalogue would be made available for digital streaming for the first time.

Baroness Betty Boothroyd was the first female female Speaker of the House of Commons, modernising the role by refusing to wear the traditional wig.

Born into a working-class family in Dewsbury in 1929, she was introduced to politics at an early age through her mother’s membership of the women’s section of the Labour Party. She became the Labour MP for West Bromwich in 1973 and for West Bromwich West – when the seat was split the following year – until her retirement in 2000.

Before her time as an MP in the UK, she worked on John F Kennedy’s campaign after he was elected as the Democratic candidate for president in the US, and also travelled across America with Democratic senator Estes Kefauver before moving on to work for left-wing Republican congressman Silvio Conte.

Following her death at the age of 93, Current Speaker of the House Sir Lindsay Hoyle described her as an “inspiring woman… an inspirational politician, and someone I was proud to call my friend”.

Other stars and notable figures who died in February 2023 include:

Legendary sports commentator John MotsonFashion designer Paco RabanneChariots Of Fire director Hugh HudsonWorld Of Sport presenter Dickie DaviesWalking Dead actor Jansen PanettiereUS financier Thomas H Lee

MARCH

Beloved TV star and comedian Paul O’Grady rose to fame thanks to his drag queen persona Lily Savage, but later became a national treasure under his own name, too.

During his career, he hosted a number of shows including The Paul O’Grady Show, Blind Date and For The Love Of Dogs, as well as Blankety Blank in the late ’90s under the guise of Savage. He also featured on TV shows such as Dr Who and Holby City.

The presenter was honoured with an MBE for services to entertainment in 2008, adding to a list of achievements including a TV BAFTA, a British Comedy Award, and a National Television Award. He was also well known for his love of animals, particularly dogs, having been an ambassador of Battersea Dogs and Cats Home since 2012.

He died aged 67 after suffering a sudden cardiac arrhythmia, with everyone from Sir Elton John to the Royal Family paying tribute.

Read more: From a rubber gloves raid to work as a mortician

Jarvis Cocker’s Pulp released their first album in 1983, but rose to prominence with their fourth and fifth albums His ‘N’ Hers and Different Class in the 1990s. Steve Mackey, who joined in 1988, played bass.

His ‘N’ Hers, featuring songs including Babies, Lipgloss and Do You Remember The First Time? was nominated for the Mercury Prize in 1994, while Different Class – famous for hits including Common People, Disco 2000, Something Changed and Sorted For Es and Whizz – went on to win the award in 1996.

In 1995, the group became a late replacement for The Stone Roses to headline that year’s Glastonbury Festival and went on to play one of the most memorable sets in the event’s history. In 2011, following a break, their comeback “secret” set drew one of the biggest crowds ever to the festival’s Park Stage.

“Steve made things happen,” the band said in tribute as they announced his death at the age of 56. “In his life & in the band… Safe travels, Steve. We hope to catch up with you one day.”

Mystic Meg, whose real name was Margaret Lake, was the UK’s most famous astrologist, a regular feature on Saturday night TV with the National Lottery show in the 1990s, when she would appear with her crystal ball to predict who would win the weekly jackpot.

She also wrote daily horoscopes for The Sun newspaper for almost 23 years.

Her horoscopes and clairvoyant messages captured the imagination of the public and she received huge amounts of correspondence – including from angry Manchester United fans after she correctly predicted their team would lose to Everton in the FA Cup final in 1995.

She died aged 80 after being admitted to hospital while suffering with flu.

Actor Lance Reddick was best known for his role in the crime drama The Wire, which ran for five seasons between 2002 and 2008 and was set in his hometown of Baltimore.

He also starred in the John Wick movie franchise alongside star Keanu Reeves, and voiced Commander Zavala in the Destiny game series.

He died suddenly at the age of 60, with his family and The Wire co-stars leading the tributes to “a man of great strength and grace”.

Other stars and notable figures who died in March 2023 include:

Saving Private Ryan and Black Hawk Down star Tom SizemoreAnn Summers entrepreneur Jacqueline GoldSouth African rapper Costa TitchLynyrd Skynyrd guitarist and sole constant member Gary RossingtonFiddler On The Roof actor Chaim TopolStar Wars and Harry Potter actor Paul GrantIntel co-founder and microchip pioneer Gordon MooreComposer Nicholas Lloyd Webber, son of Andrew Lloyd WebberDrag queen Darcelle XVProcol Harum lyricist Keith ReidOscar-winning composer Ryuichi SakamotoBrian Gillis, founding member of US boyband LFO

APRIL

Comedian, satirist, author, producer, West End star, writer, painter, born entertainer: Barry Humphries did it all. His characters included Sir Les Patterson – the lecherous “phallus-brandishing” diplomat who once chased Kylie Minogue off stage at the Royal Festival Hall – and the “boring man of the suburbs” Sandy Stone.

But he was of course best known for Dame Edna Everage, a self-described giga-star known for her extravagant spectacles, rapier wit, double entendres and fondness for gladioli flowers, who was arguably Australia’s biggest comedy export.

He had been readmitted to hospital in Sydney after suffering complications following hip surgery, and died aged 89. “He was completely himself until the very end, never losing his brilliant mind, his unique wit and generosity of spirit,” his family said in tribute.

Farewell, Possum: Barry Humphries obituary

Harry Belafonte was a Grammy, Emmy and Tony winning singer and actor who became a civil rights activist.

Reluctantly nicknamed “The King of Calypso”, he was largely responsible for bringing Caribbean music to an international audience in the 1950s, and the first singer – in any genre – to sell a million records in a year.

His song Jump In The Line (Shake, Senora) had a recent resurgence before his death, going viral on TikTok in 2020. He was also one of the first black performers to gain a wide following on film, starring in movies including Carmen Jones, Island In The Sun, and Odds Against Tomorrow.

In 2022, he was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame, becoming the oldest person ever to receive the honour. And alongside his career in entertainment, he was a committed activist who worked closely with Martin Luther King Jr during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

He died at the age of 96 with his wife by his side, according to a spokesperson.

Obituary: The singer who used helped break down racial barriers

Famous for The Jerry Springer Show – a ratings hit known for its strippers, food-fights and punch-ups – the politician-turned-presenter saw his work as a TV rebellion against the elite. “Take care of yourselves, and each other,” was his line to end every episode.

The show aired for 27 seasons, with nearly 5,000 episodes from 1991 to 2018, and even inspired Jerry Springer: The Opera. A UK version was made in 1999, and Too Hot For TV videos and DVDs were also released.

Speaking to Sky News in 2019, Springer defended the show’s contributors, who he said were frequently dismissed as “trash” – saying he saw them as “regular people involved in crazy situations”.

The presenter died aged 79 after being diagnosed with cancer. Fellow talk-show host Ricki Lake was among those paying tribute to a one-time “rival and friend”, who she described as “a lovely man”.

Paul Cattermole (left) found fame in the late 1990s and early 2000s as part of S Club 7, the pop group with hits including Reach, Don’t Stop Movin’ and Bring It All Back.

The band was also known for the BBC children TV shows Miami 7 and LA 7, which saw the seven bandmates play fictionalised versions of themselves.

Cattermole died suddenly of natural caused at the age of 46, just weeks after a big S Club 7 reunion tour had been announced. Members Rachel Stevens, Bradley McIntosh, Jo O’Meara, Jon Lee and Tina Barrett continued with the tour in October, while Hannah Spearritt, who was previously in a relationship with Cattermole, pulled out.

“We were so lucky to have had him in our lives and are thankful for the amazing memories we have,” S Club said in tribute following his death.

Read more: Steps, Blue and other pop peers remember S Club 7 star

Known for his sparkling wit and Strictly Come Dancing catchphrase of “sev-en!”, ​​​​Len Goodman turned to dance as a teenager after his football career was cut short by a foot injury. He went on to become a dancing national treasure.

With a warm humour and passion for Latin and Ballroom, Goodman was head judge on the BBCshow from its launch in 2004 to 2016. His final appearace came on the 2016 Christmas Day special, after which he was replaced by Shirley Ballas.

He also appeared on the American version of the show, Dancing With The Stars, from 2005 until his departure in 2022.

Strictly stars including presenter Claudia Winkleman and judge Craig Revel Horwood were among the many paying tribute to a man “full of twinkle, warmth and wit” following his death at the age of 78.

Other stars and notable figures who died in April 2023 include:

Nigel Lawson, chancellor to Margaret ThatcherFashion designer Mary QuantNora Forster, wife of Sex Pistols and PiL star John LydonAbba guitarist Lasse WellanderOscar-nominated actor Michael LernerThe Script guitarist Mark SheehanVeteran banker Sir Win BischoffK-pop star MoonbinBachman-Turner Overdrive guitarist Tim BachmanBritish Masterchef Australia judge Jock Zonfrillo

MAY

Tina Turner was the Queen of Rock’n’Roll, the star with the electric stage presence and one of the greatest voices of the last few decades.

She rose to fame in the 1960s alongside ex-husband Ike Turner, with the classics River Deep, Mountain High, Proud Mary, and Nutbush City Limits among their hits. After their split she later spoke out about the domestic abuse he subjected her to, with an openness that was groundbreaking at the time.

Her comeback as a solo star in the 1980s, pushing back against those who told her that as a woman in her 40s she could not make it as a solo star, gave the world hits including Private Dancer, We Don’t Need Another Hero, What’s Love Got To Do With It, and of course, a biggest track, The Best.

Turner’s story was documented in a 1993 film starring Angela Bassett, which won three Oscars, and also immortalised in a popular West End show that continues in her memory.

She died aged 83 at her home in Switzerland, with stars including Sir Mick Jagger, Sir Elton John and Diana Ross paying tribute to a “total legend on record and on stage”.

Obituary: The trauma and triumph of a music legend

Andy Rourke (pictured right above with Johnny Marr) was the bassist for alternative indie legends The Smiths, known for hits including This Charming Man, Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now, and There Is A Light That Never Goes Out.

The original line-up of the Manchester band comprised of Rourke, frontman Morrissey, guitarist Marr and drummer Mike Joyce.

Rourke also played with artists including The Pretenders, Sinead O’Connor and Badly Drawn Boy.

His death at the age of 59 was announced by Marr, who said he had been suffering with pancreatic cancer, describing Rourke as “one of those rare people that absolutely no one doesn’t like”.

Renowned British author Martin Amis published 15 novels, as well as several short fiction collections and non-fiction works, and was best known for his books Money: A Suicide Note, and London Fields.

He was twice listed for the Booker Prize for his novels Time’s Arrow and Yellow Dog, and his memoir Experience was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize.

He died of oesophageal cancer at his home Florida, aged 73, his wife Isabel Fonseca, also a writer, announced.

Obituary: A legend who was willing to examine the sordid side of his era

Other stars and notable figures who died in May 2023 include:

Singer Linda Lewis, who provided backing vocals for David Bowie and Rod StewartConvicted paedophile, former TV star Rolf HarrisHead of Britain’s richest family SP HindujaThor and RRR actor Ray StevensonITV journalist Emily MorganDemon Headmaster actor Terrence HardimanThree-time Olympic medallist sprinter Tori BowiePirates Of The Caribbean and Men In Black actor Sergio Calderon

JUNE

Glenda Jackson, who died at the age of 87, was both an Oscar-winning actress and a former Labour MP, an entertainer who turned to politics after more than three decades on stage and screen.

She won the Oscar for best actress in 1970 for her performance as a headstrong artist in director Ken Russell’s adaptation of DH Lawrence’s novel Women In Love, and again three years later for romantic comedy A Touch Of Class.

Despite her successful career in entertainment – she also won two Emmy Awards and a Tony – she never had any interest in the social and glamorous aspects of the industry, and devoted herself to politics in the 1990s, angered by the damage she believed was being inflicted on the working classes by former Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher.

But a return to entertainment saw her win a BAFTA in 2020 for her portrayal of a woman suffering from dementia in Elizabeth Is Missing, and before her death had recently completed filming The Great Escaper alongside Michael Caine.

Obituary: An Oscar winner with comedy flair – but deadly serious about politics

The death of controversial former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi brought an end to one of the most colourful and controversial political careers of recent times.

Famous for his notorious “bunga bunga” parties, the 86-year-old senator and leader of the Forza Italia party had faced a string of financial and sex scandals which made him the most polarising figure in modern Italy. The sex parties, which involved prostitutes, caused a major scandal in the country.

Well known for his brash and ebullient personality, he led Italy three times from 1994-1995, 2001-2006 and 2008-2011, stepping down as prime minister for the last time in 2011 as Italy came close to a Greece-style debt crisis.

He died after receiving treatment for a lung infection linked to chronic leukaemia.

Obituary: When Berlusconi invited reporters to the ‘bunga bunga’

Other stars and notable figures who died in June 2023 include:

Oscar-winning Argo and Little Miss Sunshine actor Alan ArkinNo Country For Old Men and The Road author Cormac McCarthyFormer Man Utd and Scotland defender Gordon McQueenLong-time boss of FTSE 100 firm Diageo Sir Ivan MenezesHair and Everwood actor Treat WilliamsUS rapper Big PokeyThe Iron Sheik, WWE star and Hulk Hogan rivalBreaking Bad actor and comedian Mike BatayehTo The Manor Born and Midsomer Murders actress Angela ThorneYou’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling songwriter Cynthia WeilMarvel comics artist John Romita SrBritain’s Got Talent star Kerri-Anne DonaldsonBritish actor Paxton Whitehead, who appeared in Friends and FrasierFiddler On The Roof creator Sheldon Harnick

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JULY

Irish singer Sinead O’Connor was best known for her 1990 song Nothing Compares 2 U, the track which made her a global star, partly due to its famous video.

She was known as much for her outspoken views, on subjects such as religion, war and feminism, as she was for her music – in 1992, she infamously tore up a photo of Pope John Paul II on Saturday Night Live to protest against abuse in the Catholic Church.

O’Connor converted to Islam in 2018 and changed her name to Shuhada Sadaqat, but still performed under her old name. Throughout her career she recorded 10 studio albums and was nominated for eight Grammys – winning in 1991 for best alternative musical performance for I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got.

She died at the age of 56, her family confirmed, with musicians from Bryan Adams to Ian Brown, as well as Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, paying tribute.

Obituary: Unapologetic and impossible to ignore

Known for his performances with a range of stars from Frank Sinatra to Lady Gaga, legendary pop and jazz singer Tony Bennett sold millions of records around the world and won 20 Grammys, including a lifetime achievement award.

One of the last of America’s great crooners, he released his first album in his mid-20s in 1952 and went on to chart in the US in every subsequent decade of his life.

Described by Sinatra as “the best singer in the business”, Bennett kept on performing well into his 90s, even after being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. His 2011 duet with Amy Winehouse, Body And Soul, was the last song she recorded before her death.

With more than 70 albums to his name, he is perhaps the only artist ever to have had new albums charting in the US in the 1950s, ’60s, ’70s, ’80s, ’90s, 2000s, 2010s and 2020s – and in 2014, he broke his own record as the oldest living artist to hit the top of the weekly Billboard 200 album chart.

He died at the age of 96, with Lada Gaga among the many paying tribute. “I will miss my friend forever,” she wrote. “I will miss singing with him, recording with him, talking with him, being on stage together.

Obituary: How words from idol Sinatra changed his career

British-French actress and singer Jane Birkin was the woman who inspired the Hermes Birkin designer handbag, who was best known for her hit single Je t’aime… moi non plus”, with her former partner Serge Gainsbourg.

Her acting credits included the 1966 film Blow Up, in which she controversially appeared naked in a threesome sex scene, and crime comedy Kaleidoscope that same year. She also starred in a 1978 adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Death on the Nile and mystery film Evil Under the Sun in 1982.

French President Emmanuel Macron led the tributes following her death at 76, writing on social media: “Because she embodied freedom, because she sang the most beautiful words of our language, Jane Birkin was a French icon.

“A complete artist, her voice was as sweet as her engagements were fiery. She bequeaths us tunes and images that will never leave us.”

Newsreader George Alagiah joined the BBC in 1989 and spent many years as one of the corporation’s leading foreign correspondents before moving to presenting and becoming the face of the broadcaster’s News At Six in 2007.

Throughout his career, he interviewed central political figures, among them former South African president Nelson Mandela, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, and ex-Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe.

Before joining the BBC, Alagiah worked as a print journalist and went on to write a number of books including A Home From Home, which looked at what it means to be British. He also presented other shows such as Mixed Britannia, looking at the UK’s mixed-race population.

He died aged 67 after being battling cancer for several years.

Read more: Newsreader remembered for ‘kindness, empathy and wonderful humanity’

Euphoria star Angus Cloud was best known for playing Fezco opposite Zendaya in the hit HBO drama show.

He was scouted for the role while working in a restaurant in Brooklyn, New York.

Following his death from an accidental overdose at the age of 25, Euphoria creator Sam Levinson described the actor as special, talented and “way too young to leave us so soon”.

Zendaya also praised her castmate’s skill, saying: “I’m lucky because I got to experience the most beautiful parts of him.”

Other stars and notable figures who died in July 2023 include:

Yes Minister actor John NettletonBritain’s first £1m football player Trevor FrancisOne Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest screenwriter Bo GoldmanRobert De Niro’s grandson Leandro De Niro RodriguezHawaiian surfer Mikala JonesSinger and Mulan star Coco LeePee Wee Herman star Paul Reubens

AUGUST

Sir Michael Parkinson, a former journalist, was one of British television’s most famous faces thanks to his talk show Parkinson, which ran on the BBC from 1971 to 1982 before a relaunch in 1998 and a move to ITV in 2004.

Over more than 800 episodes, the TV host affectionately known as Parky interviewed some of the world’s most high-profile figures – including Muhammad Ali, Sir Elton John, Tom Cruise, Helen Mirren, David and Victoria Beckham, and George Michael – and helped make comedian Sir Billy Connolly a household name.

Despite his long and illustrious career, it was his 2003 interview with a stony-faced Meg Ryan that went down in history as one of his most memorable shows – along with his run-in with Rod Hull’s Emu.

He was remembered as the “greatest interviewer of our age” following his death at the age of 88.

Obituary: The host that A-listers wanted to share their secrets with

Egyptian-born businessman Mohamed Al Fayed was best known as the former owner of the Harrods department store and Fulham football club.

He built his family’s fortune in real estate, shipping and construction, first in the Middle East and then in Europe. After moving to London in the 1960s, he soon became a friend of royals and high society and purchased high-profile businesses, including the Ritz Hotel in Paris.

The Sunday Times Rich List 2021 reported Al Fayed and his family were worth around £1.7bn.

Al Fayed’s son, the film producer Dodi Fayed, and Princess Diana died on 31 August 1997 when their car crashed in a road tunnel in Paris as they tried to outrun paparazzi photographers on motorbikes. He fought a long campaign after their deaths, alleging the crash was not an accident and that it had been orchestrated by the British security services.

The businessman died at the age of 94 and was buried after at London Central Mosque in Regent’s Park.

Read more: Casual relationship with the truth held back business achievements

Singer-songwriter Sixto Rodriguez was an American singer who unknowingly became a star in South Africa.

He was described as “more popular than Elvis” in the country by record shop owner Stephen “Sugar” Segerman, whose nickname comes from Rodriguez’s song Sugarman.

His songs protesting the Vietnam War, racial inequality and the abuse of women were banned by the apartheid regime, but inspired liberals horrified by the country’s racial segregation system.

He became the subject of the Oscar-winning documentary Searching For Sugar Man, which tells of two South Africans and their mission to seek out the fate of their musical hero, and made him recognisable to a much larger audience.

He sought unpaid royalties after becoming aware of his fame in the country – with South Africans interviewed in the documentary saying they sent royalty cheques to the US, to his now-defunct former label Sussex Records, run by former Motown executive Clarence Avant.

Clarence Avant, whose work as a record executive, promoter, mentor and dealmaker earned him the nickname “the Godfather of black music”, died at the age of 92 just days after Rodriguez, who was 81.

Mark Margolis appeared in more than 100 TV programmes and films throughout his career on screen, including Scarface, Requiem For A Dream, and Ace Ventura: Pet Detective.

But the image of the actor that will spring to mind for most will be that of the ageing crime boss sitting in his wheelchair, ringing a reception-style bell for communication – Hector Salamanca in Breaking Bad.

Margolis, who was nominated for a best guest actor Emmy in 2012 for his performance in the series, later reprised the role in the prequel series Better Call Saul. He also received acclaim for playing a Sicilian mob boss infected with HIV in prison drama Oz.

He died at the age of 83 following a short illness. Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston, who reunited with Margolis in the second series of Your Honor, released earlier in 2023, led the tributes to an actor who was “fun and engaging off the set, and (in the case of Breaking Bad and Your Honor) intimidating and frightening on set”.

Faye Fantarrow was an up-and-coming singer-songwriter from Sunderland who was spotted on social media and subsequently signed by Eurythmics star Dave Stewart, a year after winning the Alan Hull award for songwriting – a prize given annually in the North East in memory of the Lindisfarne founder.

Having survived leukaemia twice as a child, she was diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumour in August 2022. Along with family and friends, she had been fundraising to cover the costs of treatment in the US, but her illness progressed.

She died in August, aged just 21, with her family paying tribute to a young woman who “gave us joy, laughter, and the gift of her music”.

Other stars and notable figures who died in August 2023 include:

The Exorcist and French Connection director William FriedkenBletchley Park WW2 codebreaker Margaret BettsDJ Casper, creator of the Cha Cha SlideThe Kinks former keyboard player John GoslingThe Band lead guitarist and songwriter Robbie RobertsonGame Of Thrones and EastEnders actor Darren KentLittle House On The Prairie actress Hersha ParadyWWE star Bray WyattWhitesnake guitarist Bernie MarsdenDire Straits guitarist Jack Sonni

SEPTEMBER

Sir Michael Gambon was one of the original members of the Royal National Theatre alongside Laurence Olivier n the 1960s, and starred in films including The King’s Speech, Gosford Park and Paddington throughout his lengthy career in entertainment.

He also played French detective Jules Maigret in the ITV series Maigret, as well as starring in the BBC series The Singing Detective.

But Sir Michael was best known for playing Hogwarts headmaster Dumbledore in a number of the Harry Potter films, taking over from Richard Harris following his death in 2002. He played the character from the third film, The Prisoner Of Azkaban, through to the eighth, Deathly Hallows – Part 2 – and following his death at the age of 82, fans of the story were encouraged to raise their wands in his honour.

Scottish-born star David McCallum featured in numerous theatre productions including The Lion In Winter and Julius Caesar, but his big break followed a move to America where he was cast in the role of secret agent Illya Kuryakin in the TV series The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

Despite initially having only a couple of lines, he was spotted by the producers and boosted as co-star of the spy series alongside Robert Vaughn, receiving two two Emmy Award nominations during the show’s run.

He also starred in classic war films The Great Escape and Mosquito Squadron, as a scientist in the 1975 sci-fi show The Invisible Man, and later as Dr Donald “Ducky” Mallard in NCIS for 20 years.

Following his death at the age of 90, his family paid tribute to the “kindest, coolest, most patient and loving father”, and a “true renaissance man… fascinated by science and culture and would turn those passions into knowledge”.

Comedian and impersonator Mike Yarwood became a household name in the 1960s and 1970s, attracting huge TV audiences for his impersonations of politicians and other public figures.

His initial success came on Sunday Night at the London Palladium, on which he first appeared in 1964, before hosting shows on the BBC under his own name.

The subjects of Yarwood’s impressions included former Labour prime minister Harold Wilson, his Tory rival Ted Heath, political interviewer Robin Day, rugby league commentator Eddie Waring and football manager Brian Clough.

“The Mike Yarwood Show (1977) holds the record for the largest single Christmas Day audience of 21.4 million viewers,” the Royal Variety Charity said in a statement following his death at 82. “He leaves behind an immeasurable void in the entertainment industry.”

California senator Diane Feinstein was the longest-serving female senator, elected in 1992, and the oldest member of the chamber.

Known for fighting for abortion rights and gun control, she was a Democratic Party politician who tried to find common ground with Republicans over three decades in the Senate.

She died last at her home in Washington DC at the age of 90, with President Joe Biden hailing her as a “pioneering American” and a “trailblazer” after learning of her death.

Other stars and notable figures who died in September 2023 include:

Singer-songwriter and billionaire businessman Jimmy BuffettSmash Mouth frontman Steve HarwellNelson Mandela’s granddaughter Zoleka MandelaSheffield United footballer Maddy Cusack8 Mile actor and rapper Nashawn BreedloveActress Jean Boht, who starred in Bread, Some Mothers Do ‘Ave ‘Em and Grange HillAuthor, comedian and domestic abuse campaigner Maddy Anholt

OCTOBER

Matthew Perry rose to worldwide fame playing Chandler Bing in the 1990s sitcom Friends, alongside Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Matt LeBlanc, Lisa Kudrow and David Schwimmer.

Behind the scenes, he battled addiction, which he spoke openly about as he released his memoir, Friends, Lovers, And The Big Terrible Thing, in 2022. He also worked to help others suffering similar troubles.

“When I die, I don’t want Friends to be the first thing that’s mentioned – I want helping others to be the first thing that’s mentioned and I’m going to live the rest of my life proving that,” he said in an interview at the time. “Addiction is far too powerful for anyone to defeat alone. But together, one day at a time, we can beat it down.”

Following his death at the age of 54, a foundation to “honour his legacy” and help others “struggling with the disease of addiction” was set up in his name. His five Friends co-stars released a joint tribute, saying: “We were more than just castmates. We are a family.”

Obituary: The one who made everyone laugh

Sir Bobby Charlton was an England World Cup winner and a Manchester United legend. In a 17-year career as a midfielder for the club, he played 758 games and scored 249 goals – both of which were longstanding records until Ryan Giggs and Wayne Rooney surpassed his feats in 2008 and 2017 respectively.

For England, he played 106 times and scored 49 goals. Renowned for his humility, discipline and sportsmanship, he was never sent off during his time as an England player nor for Manchester United. His wins included the European Cup, three English league titles as well as the FA Cup.

After retiring from playing in 1976, he went into coaching and founded a youth scheme that included David Beckham among its participants. He joined the board of directors at United in 1984, where he remained for 39 years – and persuaded the board in 1986 to appoint Sir Alex Ferguson, who delivered 38 trophies during nearly 27 years in charge.

Following his death at the age of 96, Manchester United paid tribute to a man who was “a hero to millions, not just in Manchester, or the United Kingdom, but wherever football is played around the world”.

Obituary: Forever a gentleman of English football

Richard Roundtree‘s turn as streetwise private detective John Shaft in the 1971 thriller made him a star – with the famous musical intro by Isaac Hayes also winning an Oscar.

Shaft is the best known of the 1970s Blaxploitation genre – movies by black crews and actors aimed at black audiences – which later influenced directors such as Quentin Tarantino.

The film sees a Harlem mobster hire Roundtree’s character to rescue his kidnapped daughter and it became a breakthrough hit despite a modest budget. Shaft’s Big Score followed in 1972 and Shaft In Africa in 1973, and there was also a brief TV series. He reprised the role in a 2000 movie of the same name starring Samuel L Jackson as his nephew, as well as a 2019 Netflix film that continued the franchise.

Roundtree worked as a model in his early 20s before joining a black theatre company and landing the Shaft role aged 28. He also appeared in Roots in 1977 – a landmark miniseries based on the US slavery era – and soap opera Generations from 1989 to 1991.

He died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 81.

Other stars and notable figures who died in October 2023 include:

Oscar-nominated Rocky actor Burt YoungUS poet Louise Gluck, who won the Nobel Prize for LiteratureComic book artist and writer Keith GiffenThree’s Company actress Suzanne SomersActress Haydyn Gwynne, who starred in Drop The Dead Donkey and The WindsorsDays Of Our Lives actor Tyler ChristopherFounding member of The Isley Brothers Rudolph IsleyMassive Attack guitarist Angelo BruschiniFormer Man City star and chairman Francis LeeIce hockey player Adam JohnsonMarvel stuntman Taraja Ramsess, and three of his childrenEverton chairman and West End producer Bill KenwrightDave Courtney, former gangster turned actor and author

NOVEMBER

Born on 25 December 1957, perhaps it was meant to be that Shane MacGowan would always be associated with Christmas.

Throughout the 1980s and early ’90s, the Irish singer-songwriter had hits including Dirty Old Town, The Irish Rover, A Pair Of Brown Eyes and A Rainy Night In Soho with The Pogues – but it’s their 1987 song Fairytale Of New York, featuring the late Kirsty MacColl, which is known across the world and sung during the festive period.

He died at the age of 65 after several periods of ill health in his later years.

“Shane will always be the light that I hold before me and the measure of my dreams and the love of my life,” his wife Victoria Mary Clarke said as she announced his death, with stars including U2 and Bruce Springsteen among those paying tribute.

Obituary: A wild life and a raw talent

Former England football manager Terry Venables guided the men’s national team to the semi-finals of Euro ’96, where they were knocked out by Germany 6-5 on penalties at Wembley.

During his managerial career, he also was in charge of clubs including Tottenham, Crystal Palace, Queens Park Rangers and Barcelona.

As a player, Venables represented sides including Chelsea, Spurs and QPR and made more than 500 appearances. He also had two England caps.

But he made his real mark as a coach, winning La Liga with Barcelona in the 1984-85 campaign and then the league cup the following season. On his return to England, he lifted the FA Cup with Tottenham in 1991.

Gary Lineker, Alan Shearer and Gareth Southgate were among those paying tribute following his death at the age of 80, with Lineker – who played for Venables at Barcelona and Spurs – describing him as “the best, most innovative coach that I had the privilege and pleasure of playing for”.

Read more: A ‘players’ man’ who nearly guided England to glory

Alistair Darling was a Labour party stalwart who served as chancellor under Gordon Brown, becoming a household name when the then-prime minister gave him the keys to the Treasury back in 2007.

He ran the department throughout the global banking crisis and stayed in post until Mr Brown lost the election in 2010.

But he had been a presence in Tony Blair’s government from the start, beginning as chief secretary to the Treasury in 1997 following Labour’s landslide victory, and going on to run a number of departments – including work and pensions, transport and trade.

He died aged 70 after a short spell in Western General Hospital under the “wonderful care” of the cancer team, his family said.

Read more: Westminster stunned by shock death of canny chancellor

TV presenter and former model Annabel Giles hosted the ITV fashion show Posh Frocks And New Trousers in the 1990s and was previously married to the musician and record producer Midge Ure.

Born in Pontypool, Wales, she began modelling in her 20s and gained prominence presenting ITV shows Razzmatazz and Night Network. She also appeared in the 1993 film adaptation of Jilly Cooper’s Riders and featured as a panellist on a number of shows, including Have I Got News For You, Through The Keyhole and Noel’s House Party.

In 2013, she entered the jungle for I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!

Her children announced her death at the age of 64, just months after she was diagnosed with a brain tumour.

Former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger had major influence on American foreign policy under presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.

Born in Germany in 1923, he fled the Nazi regime with his family as a teenager and settled in the US in 1938.

During eight years as a national security adviser and secretary of state, he was involved in major foreign policy events including the first example of “shuttle diplomacy” seeking peace in the Middle East, secret negotiations with China to defrost relations between the burgeoning superpowers, and the instigation of the Paris peace talks seeking an end to the Vietnam conflict.

In 1973, he was jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to negotiate an end to the Vietnam War. However, Dr Kissinger, along with President Nixon, also bore the brunt of criticism from US allies following the fall of Saigon to North Vietnamese forces in 1975 as the remaining US personnel fled what is now known as Ho Chi Minh City.

He died at the age of 100 at his home in Connecticut, according to a statement from Kissinger Associates Inc.

Read more: A ‘top diplomat’ for some, a ‘war criminal’ for others

Dean Sullivan was the longest-serving member of the Channel 4 soap Brookside, playing Jimmy Corkhill between 1986 and 2003, when the show ended.

The soap became known for its groundbreaking storylines, featuring the UK’s first pre-watershed lesbian kiss in 1994. Stars included Anna Friel, who played Beth Jordache; Claire Sweeney, who played Jimmy’s daughter Lindsey; and The Royle Family’s Ricky Tomlinson and Sue Johnston (pictured above with Sullivan), who played Bobby and Sheila Grant.

Sullivan, from Liverpool, was a graduate of Lancaster University and a primary school teacher before becoming a professional actor. After joining Brookside, Jimmy became one of the soap’s best-known characters, inviolved in many of the most memorable moments – including the discovery of the body of villain Trevor Jordache under a patio with his dog Cracker.

The man still remembered by millions as Jimmy died peacefully at the age of 68, his agent said, after being diagnosed with cancer in 2018.

Other stars and notable figures who died in November 2023 include:

Pete Garner, original bassist for The Stone RosesKilling Joke guitarist Kevin ‘Geordie’ WalkerThe Night Cafe frontman Sean MartinVeteran magician David BerglasFormer West End star Anne Hart, Ronnie Corbett’s widowFormer Home And Away star Johnny RuffoTyler Christopher, Days Of Our Lives actor and ex-husband of Eva LongoriaRoger Kastel, the artist behind iconic film posters for Jaws and Empire Strikes BackSex And The City actress Frances SternhagenMr Big Stuff singer Jean WrightFormer US first lady Rosalynn CarterActor Dex Carvey, son of Wayne’s World star Dana CarveyKool & The Gang co-founder and drummer George “Funky” BrownActor Joss AcklandRestaurateur, author and Saturday Kitchen chef Russell NormanActor Peter SpellosGoodfellas and Sopranos actress Suzanne Shepherd

DECEMBER

British poet, writer and actor Benjamin Zephaniah had 14 collections of poetry and five novels published throughout his career. He also acted, playing the role of Jeremiah Jesus in the hit series Peaky Blinders.

Born and raised in the Handsworth area of Birmingham, he had dyslexia and left school at the age of 13, unable to read or write. But he was given an old, manual typewriter and started performing poetry on the “sound systems of Birmingham”.

He turned down an OBE in 2003, saying the Queen should stop “going on about the empire”.

Zephaniah died at the age of 65, eight weeks after being diagnosed with a brain tumour, with tributes paid to “a true pioneer and innovator”.

Soap veteran Steve Halliwell played Zak Dingle in Emmerdale for nearly three decades, making his first appearance as the family patriarch in October 1994.

The role was not initially intended to be permanent, but he became a central character after winning over viewers and producers.

Known for his flat cap, wellies and wax jacket, the pig farmer featured in a number of dramatic storylines, including divorcing his first wife Nellie, played by Sandra Gough, and later marrying Lisa, portrayed by Jane Cox. There was further trouble in love when he had an affair and married Joanie Wright, played by Denise Black, before later reuniting with Lisa.

He died peacefully at the age of 77, his family said, “making us laugh to the end”.

South Korean actor Lee Sun-kyun was best known for his role in the Oscar-winning Parasite, which made history when it became the first foreign language film to be named best picture in 2020.

Lee, who played rich father Park Dong-ik, also won a Screen Actors Guild award, along with his castmates, for his part in the black comedy.

The actor was also known for his leading roles in South Korean movies including the 2012 thriller Helpless and 2014’s All About My Wife, and was the lead in Apple TV+’s Dr Brain – the first Korean-language original series on the streaming platform – for which he received an International Emmy Award nomination.

He died in an apparent suicide, aged 48.

An ardent advocate of post-war European integration, Jacques Delors served as president of the European Commission for three terms – longer than any other holder of the office – from January 1985 until the end of 1994.

The Frenchman, a Socialist, was also the founding father of the European Union’s historic single currency project.

He is best remembered in the UK as the object of of the Sun newspaper’s anger to the rising power of the EU in 1990, summed up in one of its most famous headlines: ‘Up Yours Delors’.

French President Emmanuel Macron called him an “inexhaustible architect of our Europe” and a fighter for human justice following his death at 98.

Other stars and notable figures who died in December 2023 include:

Moody Blues and Wings guitarist Denny LaineAC/DC’s original drummer Colin BurgessHoney Boo Boo co-star Anna ‘Chickadee’ CardwellUS prime-time writer, director and producer Norman LearBrooklyn Nine-Nine star Andre BraugherLong-running The Archers star Ian PepperellRyan O’Neal, Oscar-nominated star of Love Story and BonesDixie Chicks founding member Laura LynchWhatever Happened To The Likely Lads? actress Brigit ForsythTyler Goodson, who featured on S-Town podcastThe Entertainer and Alfie actress Shirley Anne FieldSandra Day O’Connor, first woman on US Supreme CourtAustralian chef Bill GrangerCall Of Duty star Kamar de los ReyesAntiques Roadshow expert Henry SandonDoctor Who and Emmerdale actor Richard FranklinFormer German finance minister Wolfgang SchaeubleFilmmaker David Leland

This list is extensive but not exhaustive

Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK

Picture credits: AP, Reuters, PA, Taylor Jewell/Invision, Warner Bros Entertainment, Victoria Will, Shutterstock, HBO/Eddy Chen, Warrick Page/Sony/AMC/Kobal/Shutterstock, ITV, CTK, Rex/Hammer/Kobal/Shutterstock, Everett/Shutterstock

Prague gunman reportedly confessed to murdering a father and baby in suicide note

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The gunman who killed 14 people at a university in Prague before killing himself, reportedly left a suicide note confessing to the murder of a father and his baby six days earlier, Czech media have reported.

A note found at the home of David Kozak, 24, was said to have contained the admission he shot and killed a 32-year-old man and two-month-old girl on 15 December in the Klanovice woods, close to Czech capital, according to Denik N.

The paper quoted a police spokesperson, who said: “I can confirm that we secured a letter in Hostoun where the perpetrator wrote that he committed the attack.

“The contents of the document cannot be made public at this time due to the ongoing investigation into the entire incident.”

Police had previously believed Kozak was linked to the killing of the pair, adding they regretted not being able to get him earlier.

He is also accused of killing his own father just hours before carrying out the mass shooting at Charles University.

Kozak murdered 14 people in his attack on 21 December.

More on Czech Republic

People lay tributes outside Charles University after a mass shooting

Prague in mourning after deadly mass shooting – but survivor says city ‘will stand strong’

(L-R) A police officer and shooting suspect David Kozak. Pics: Czech Police

Prague shooting: Bodycam footage shows police storming building in search for gunman

A woman lights a candle in front of the Charles University main building

Prague shooting: Day of mourning declared after 13 killed – as suspect linked to separate murders

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A further 25 were injured, including three foreign nationals – two from Saudi Arabia and one from the Netherlands.

Read more:What do we know so far about mass shooting?Footage shows people hiding on ledge during manhuntPrague in mourning – but survivor says city will ‘stand strong’

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2:53

Building evacuated as police searched for student

Following the discovery of the father’s body, police ordered the evacuation of one of the university buildings, where the gunman was due to have a lecture at 2pm on Thursday.

According to Mr Vondrasek, the evacuation was completed at 2.22pm, and after this, police continued to search for the student.

However, at 2.59pm, gunshots were reported in another university building, the Charles University Faculty of Arts near Jan Palach Square.

At one point the gunman shot and injured three people outside the building with a long-range weapon and police fired back.

As officers approached his location, he was armed with a shotgun and killed himself, authorities said.

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2:23

Police found his body while searching the building.

“Piles of ammunition – unbelievable quantities” were found at the scene, an official said.

They added it appears he was inspired by a terrorist attack in Russia.

A day of mourning was declared on Saturday 23 December, as a result of the country’s worst mass shooting in history.

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Wham!’s Last Christmas crowned Christmas number one

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Wham! has been declared the UK’s official Christmas number one with Last Christmas – 39 years after first being denied the festive top spot.

George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley’s festive classic beat hits from Eurovision star Sam Ryder, Mariah Carey, and The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl.

Ryder’s You’re Christmas To Me secured second place, followed by Carey’s All I Want For Christmas Is You.

Stick Season by Noah Kahan came fourth and Merry Christmas by Ed Sheeran and Sir Elton John came fifth.

Written and produced by the late Michael, Last Christmas was beaten to the crown in 1984 by Band Aid’s Do They Know It’s Christmas?

The 80s pop duo’s hit has now set the record for the longest-ever journey to UK Christmas number one, according to the Official Charts Company.

“It is a big moment, and it is a big moment for me and everyone involved with Wham! and George Michael,” Ridgeley told BBC Radio 1.

“He (Michael) wrote it with number one in mind, that was the goal. He happened to write what distills the essence of Christmas in audio form.

“It is an extraordinary achievement. It makes it all the more wonderful to experience.”

When asked what it takes to write a Christmas number one, Ridgeley said: “That’s the magic, it is very difficult to identify quite what it is that makes a number one that has that breadth of appeal.

“What Yog (Michael) did with this track was distilled what Christmas represents in many people’s minds.”

‘Huge disappointment’ to miss out in 1984

Ridgeley said it was a “huge disappointment” for the pair not to reach the top spot in 1984 as they believed it was “nailed on”.

“Had it not been for Band Aid’s Do They Know It’s Christmas?, it probably would’ve been number one,” the 60-year-old said.

“Thwarted for many years subsequent to that – the perennial bridesmaid – over recent years it seems it’s become part of the fabric of Christmas for a lot of people.

“Christmas number one has been a long-held ambition for Yog (Michael) and I, and for the fans, too. It’ll mean a lot to Wham!’s legacy – it’s the crowning glory.”

‘Fans will have a real sense of achievement’

Ridgeley said the song was “conceived as a Christmas number one” as Michael had “lofty ambitions for himself as a songwriter”, before the band split in 1986.

“Our fans will have a real sense of achievement and pride in the fact it’s become Christmas number one,” Ridgeley added.

Michael died on Christmas Day in 2016, aged 53.

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Last Christmas is now the UK’s third biggest song of all time, with a combined lifetime total of 5.34 million chart units, the Official Charts Company said.

It was streamed 13.3 million times over the last seven days, making it the most-streamed Christmas number one ever during Christmas week.

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Luke Littler: Who is the 16-year-old taking the World Darts Championship by storm – and celebrating with a kebab?

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Sixteen-year-old Luke Littler is stealing the show at the World Darts Championship – and is now tipped as one of the favourites for the title.

Nicknamed “The Nuke”, the teenager’s sensational performances have seen him storm into the third round and have won plaudits from his idol Phil “The Power” Taylor.

Here’s everything you need to know about the sport’s new prodigy – from learning to play in nappies as a toddler to his celebratory meals going viral.

Playing darts at 18 months old

He may only be a teenager but Littler, from Warrington, Cheshire, has been practising his throwing for some time.

He told Sky News: “There’s a video on YouTube of me when I was 18 months in a nappy listening to Raymond van Barneveld’s music, listening to Phil Taylor’s music, doing their celebrations.

“That’s when it started – 18 months and in a nappy on a magnetic board.

“[Aged] four or five I was on a proper board but it was a bit low and then about seven to eight (years old), that’s when I started playing [at] the proper height and the proper length. So it’s just been all darts in my life so far.”

Talent is one thing, but having the right support system to nurture it is just as important.

The teen clearly thinks a lot of his parents, who he says are “proud” of what he’s achieved so far.

“They just can’t believe (it), I can’t believe it myself,” he told Sky News.

“But it’s just good to have a set of parents who are supportive and that are always there for me and I’ve got a good management team around me. So it’s just the best group of people that can be around me, to be honest.”

Viral celebrations

A photo of Littler celebrating his first round win at the PDC World Dart Championships with a kebab went viral on social media.

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He’s clearly a down-to-earth lad, but with a World Darts Championship fixture looming over him until after Christmas, will Littler’s festive period feel a bit different to ours?

“It’s just like Christmas every year,” he said.

“Just chill, relax with the family, and obviously while they’re doing whatever, I’ll have to get on the board for a few hours each day and then obviously come back down, whenever the schedule’s next out.”

Fans and fame

Littler’s celebrity status is rising with every dart he throws.

His Instagram account has gone from 4,000 followers at the start of this tournament to 23,500 and counting.

He told Sky News he could feel the nation’s support while on the big stage.

“Everyone’s cheering, wanting my autograph and everything,” he said.

“Even young kids having my darts shirt on… It was good to see when I stepped on the stage.”

He also talked about the popularity of his personalised “The Nuke” darts sets.

“After my first two games in Ally Pally, 900 sets sold,” he said. “People all over the world… [I] couldn’t believe it. 900 sets, for winning two games at the Ally Pally!”

His career so far

Littler won his first match at the PDC World Championship on Wednesday, averaging an astonishing 106.12 in his demolition of former Lakeside champion Christian Kist in the first round.

He then held off a mid-match charge from the experienced Andrew Gilding to knock out the 20th seed with a 3-1 win on Thursday night.

Littler’s matches have seen the famously rowdy crowd at London’s Alexandra Palace (or Ally Pally) chanting: “You’ve got school in the morning.”

His early form means he’s suddenly on his way to being a household name, but his talent has been evident for some time.

He won the England Youth Grand Prix in 2019, became England Youth Open champion in 2021 and won his first senior title at the Irish Open later that year.

He won the Welsh Open in 2022 and this year notched further senior titles at the Isle of Man Classic, Gibraltar Open, British Open and British Classic.

The 16-year-old is also a back-to-back JDC World Champion and reigning World Youth Champion.

Littler’s got big dreams

The rookie reckons he can go all the way this year, and bookies clearly agree – he’s their fifth favourite to take home the championship trophy.

“If my A-game is there throughout the tournament, then I don’t see why not,” he told Sky Sports News when asked if he backs himself to win it.

“I know I’ve got a good chance,” he went on.

“I just wanted to win my first-round game and then as soon as I got back to my hotel, I said to my dad, ‘let’s make sure we come back after Christmas’.

“Now I’ve overachieved and hopefully I can beat Matt [Campbell] and overachieve again.”

When asked about his hero Phil Taylor backing him to win the tournament, he added: “What Phil has said, it’s a nice thing. It’s unbelievable – my idol talking about me.

“I’ve got to beat whoever’s in front of me, and just got to go game by game and hopefully, I do win it.”

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The Power isn’t the only former darts player singing his praises. Sky Sports Darts’ Wayne Mardle has said Littler is “probably the most naturally gifted player I have ever seen in my life”.

What’s next for Littler?

He’ll face 34-year-old Canadian Matt Campbell on 27 December, live on Sky Sports Darts, with the final taking place on 3 January.

If he goes all the way, Littler will celebrate his 17th birthday on 21 January as the world champion.

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The small consolation of marginal economic growth in a year of flatlining performance is gone

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The British economy increasingly resembles those sepia-toned clips of early American aeronauts trying and failing to get off the ground.

Typically these hapless pioneers race along a harbour wall, strapped to a homemade contraption informed more by the spirit of optimism than a realistic grasp of physics.

With hand-cranked mechanical wings clanking, they race towards the edge and leap into the void, hopes soaring at precisely the moment gravity asserts itself, dragging them and their creations into the brink.

The data that informs economic and political decision-making in the UK has just done likewise.

In a year of flatlining performance, there was the small consolation that at least the economy was growing, if only marginally.

Not anymore.

Revisions of growth data, carried out routinely by the Office for National Statistics, have hauled GDP back to earth and to the edge of its own metaphorical harbour wall, beneath which lies recession.

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The ONS now says that in the third quarter of 2023 the economy shrank by 0.1%, not a huge move down from the previous estimate of zero, but negative nonetheless. The second quarter, meanwhile, has been dragged back from growth of 0.2% to zero.

With GDP in October, the first month of the fourth quarter, falling 0.3%, that has taken the UK to the brink of a technical recession, defined as two successive quarters of negative growth.

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Already in recession?

In fact, if we look at GDP per head of population, we are already there, with per-capita growth at minus 0.1% in Q2 and minus 0.3% in Q3.

That helps explain why, whatever the data says, many still feel the cost of living squeeze acutely.

The definition of recession is somewhat arbitrary and has its roots, the ONS says, in the work of US Presidential speech writers of the 1960s, but it is widely accepted and matters to the economic and political discourse.

Interest rate impact

For economists at the Bank of England, the figures will inform their next steps in the New Year after December’s decision to hold interest rates at 5.25%.

A steeper-than-expected fall in the rate of inflation revealed earlier this week was good news, suggesting that the rate squeeze is working faster than anticipated.

The GDP revisions are more evidence that rates are doing their job by slowing down the economy. Conversely and inevitably, both these bits of data will also increase pressure on the Bank to start cutting them.

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Bad news but an easier target for Sunak

Politically, meanwhile, this is another kick in the tail-end of the year for the prime minister, who has made delivering economic growth one of his five pledges, only one of which (halving inflation) has been achieved, and has more to do with economic gravity and the Bank than Downing Street.

Number 10 has refined the pledge in its favour, and now says that Rishi Sunak wants to be judged on whether there is any growth in Q4 compared to Q3.

Better-than-expected retail figures in November may give him hope that is still in reach, and ironically today’s contraction in Q3 may make growth in Q4 more likely to achieve.

And to be clear, tangible growth is good news for everyone, not just those fighting for their futures in Westminster.

But increasingly Mr Sunak looks more like one of those predecessors to the Wright Brothers than a man with considerable experience of private jets would like.

All year the economy has bumped along, utterly unable to find the momentum or a kindly updraft that would enable it to escape the ground.

With the Conservative Party tied to the tail fin, it makes it all the more likely that the election date, Mr Sunak’s own harbour wall, will be delayed as long as it can be avoided.

Rishi Sunak under fire from own MPs over family visa salary threshold ‘delay’

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Rishi Sunak is under fire from his own MPs after rowing back on plans to lift the salary threshold for a family visa – with some Tories accusing him of “weakness”.

The prime minister said the government was “increasing the salary threshold significantly” to £38,700 in “early 2025” – a change from the original plan laid out by Home Secretary James Cleverly earlier this month.

The threshold for a family visa – which applies to Britons who wish to bring family members to the UK – was due to rise from £18,600 to £38,700 next spring in a bid to reduce legal net migration, which hit a record high last year.

But on Thursday night the Home Office quietly watered down the measure, saying the threshold would first be raised to £29,000 from the spring, and then increased in “incremental stages” – though no timetable was set for when the top figure would be introduced.

The climbdown has angered Tory MPs on the right of the party in favour of tighter migration controls.

David Jones, deputy chairman of the right-wing European Research Group, told the PA news agency it was a “regrettable sign of weakness” while Jonathan Gullis, a Conservative former minister wrote on X that it was “deeply disappointing and undermines our efforts”.

Former minister Sir John Hayes, chairman of the Common Sense Group of Tory MPs, told the BBC the earnings threshold should rise to £38,700 “quickly” to give people “certainty”.

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Robert Jenrick, who quit as immigration minister over the government’s stalled Rwanda plan, was also among the critics, with a source close to him saying: “The whole package needs to be implemented now, not long-grassed to the spring or watered down. More measures are needed, not less.”

Speaking to reporters while visiting ambulance workers in Lincolnshire on Friday, the prime minister insisted the government was doing “exactly as we said” in terms of raising the salary threshold for a family visa, but that the process would happen in “two stages”.

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He confirmed that the threshold would increase from £18,600 to £29,000 from next spring before going to the “full amount” in early 2025.

“So it’s exactly what we said we’re doing, we’re just phasing it over the next year or so,” he added.

Earlier this month Mr Cleverly outlined a five-point plan to reduce legal migration after net migration hit a record-breaking 745,000 in the year to December 2022.

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Other measures announced in the plan include a ban on care workers bringing over their families and raising the minimum salary for a skilled worker visa from £26,200 to £38,700.

Mr Cleverly told the Commons last month the government would “increase the skilled worker earnings threshold by a third to £38,700 from next spring, in line with the median full-time wage for those kinds of jobs”.

‘Tail wagging the dog’

The original plan was criticised by immigration researchers at The Migration Observatory at Oxford University, who warned the new family visa rules could leave British citizens with a foreign partner facing greater restrictions on who they can live with than migrant workers.

It said the plan to hike the family visa salary threshold to £38,700 could mean that “in some circumstances, British workers would face more restrictive rules on family than migrant workers in the same job”.

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Labour’s shadow international development secretary Lisa Nandy said the backtracking was “just another example of the tail wagging the dog” and accused the government of “running scared of its own back benches”.

Asked whether the party would allow the rise to go ahead if it wins the next election, Ms Nandy said Labour had been “clear all along that immigration policy has to be aligned with skills” to address shortages here in the UK.

Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said ministers “failed to consult anyone on their new proposals and took no account of the impact of steep spousal visa changes on families next year, so it’s no surprise they are now rowing back in a rush”.

The Liberal Democrats suggested the planned £38,700 threshold had always been “unworkable”, with the party’s home affairs spokesman Alistair Carmichael branding it “yet another half-thought-through idea to placate the hardliners on their own back benches”.

Rwanda policy troubles

As well as seeking to reduce legal migration, the government has made stopping small boat crossings in the Channel a core part of its strategy to reduce illegal migration.

To achieve that aim, the government wants to deport asylum seekers who arrive in the UK by irregular means to Rwanda.

Mr Sunak saw off a rebellion over the plan earlier this month, but further battles are likely to await him in the new year as right-wing Tories demand the bill goes further while those on the moderate wing have warned Mr Sunak that he risks losing their support if he significantly alters the bill to placate the right.

As well as deporting asylum seekers to Rwanda, the government has sought to manage the high number of people arriving by small boat by housing them in former military bases – including the Catterick Garrison in his own constituency of Richmond.

However, there have been reports in the Times that the Home Office had assessed the garrison as unsuitable for a large asylum facility.

Read more:Cleverly’s climbdown over family visas looks like a hasty, panic retreatStarmer’s glitter shower to Cameron’s comeback: 2023’s unexpected political moments

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The prime minister confirmed the Home Office assessment but said it was still his intention to use a military base in his constituency to house refugees from Afghanistan.

He said it was “not right” to suggest his constituency was different from any other constituency when asked why plans for the garrison had reportedly been scrapped.

“More generally taking a step back, stopping the boats is a massive priority of mine,” he said.

“It’s something I said I wanted to do because that’s ultimately the best way to relieve pressure on hotels and other areas and local communities.”

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Eurostar trains to resume after French strike – as Storm Pia causes more travel disruption

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Travellers heading to Europe should soon be able to resume their journey after a deal was done to end a strike that halted cross-Channel trains.

Thousands were stranded on Thursday when French workers rejected an end-of-year bonus.

Services affected included Eurostar, which runs passenger services from London St Pancras, and Eurotunnel Le Shuttle, which runs vehicle-carrying trains from Folkestone.

Follow live:Christmas travel and Storm Pia aftermath updates

The disruption started about midday and at least 30 Eurostar trains were cancelled, with many turning back to where they started.

Eurotunnel later said management and trade unions had reached a deal that meant services would “resume progressively this evening and Eurostar tomorrow morning [Friday]”.

Getlink, the company that manages Channel Tunnel infrastructure, said unions wanted three times the €1,000 (£866) bonus they were offered.

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The problems came on a day when all services from London Euston were suspended for a time due to overhead line damage near Watford Junction.

King’s Cross also had severe delays due to a fallen tree in the Newark area.

Large crowds massed outside the stations and on concourses, staring at their phones and trying to work out alternative routes.

At 4.30pm, Euston said the problem had been fixed and “we are working closely with train operators to get you on the move”.

However some operators, such as London Northwestern, were still reporting disruption on Thursday evening.

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Storm Pia also disrupted air travel, with some planes diverting from northern airports and British Airways grounding two dozen flights.

Video showed a pilot fighting to land his plane at Birmingham in 50mph crosswinds.

The aircraft was less than 100ft from the tarmac when it was forced to pull up – but it made it down safely on the second try.

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Gusts of 115mph were recorded at Cairngorm Summit in the Highlands, while Brizlee Wood, near Alnwick in Northumberland, saw 81mph.

About 40,000 households were affected by electricity outages in the North East, Yorkshire and northern Lincolnshire.

But nearly all were reconnected by Thursday evening, said operator Northern Powergrid.

Elsewhere, a man was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries after a tree hit his car in Clifton, Derbyshire. Police in the county said a number of trees had fallen on the road.

Storm Pia, named by Danish forecasters, is set to move towards mainland Europe where its effect is expected to be more severe, said the Met Office.

Super League: A bruising ruling for UEFA – but breakaway league a non-starter without Premier League clubs

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Unlike every other football match – this is one fixture where both sides are claiming victory.

The Super League ruling from the EU’s top court is bruising for UEFA – concluding the Champions League organisers abuse their dominance of the European football market by blocking rival competitions.

And the dwindling number of public Super League backers – just Barcelona and Real Madrid remaining – now see some prospect of reviving the rebellion that collapsed within 48 hours in 2021.

But UEFA seems sure its lucrative competitions aren’t under threat of being usurped.

The bullish and sarcastic dismissal of the new-look Super League from UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin was as much a reflection of the power he has accumulated across the continent than confidence in being able to bat away the Court of Justice verdict.

Read more:How would the new European Super League work?

Even if UEFA’s ability to ban clubs who join a Super League has now been neutered, there is no sign of more signing up – beyond the Spanish duo.

Mr Ceferin suggested changes could be needed to how UEFA operates and regulates the Champions League after being found in breach of EU competition law but couldn’t offer any specific response.

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UEFA has already conceded some control of the Champions League by linking up with elite clubs to sell the television rights.

And that keeps Paris Saint-Germain, in particular, away from the lure of the Super League given it is run by Nasser Al-Khelaifi – the Qatari who also controls leading Champions League rights holder beIN Sports.

And a revamped Champions League next season will give clubs what they sought with the attempted Super League split in 2021 – more European games.

The group stage is growing and giving teams eight rather than six matches before potential knockout round fixtures.

The Super League proposition is at least 14 continental fixtures each year, but it is vague how they would fund the competition when planning to stream every game for free.

UEFA is projecting to earn around £4bn each season from its overhauled Champions League.

And that is a competition without guaranteed annual slots. Qualification can only be achieved based on the previous season’s ranking domestically or by winning the Champions League.

But even though the Super League has scrapped lifetime places for founding members – including six from England – its new format of three divisions locks in places for years.

The dream that one successful Premier League season could earn qualification to play against the best in Europe is removed.

But this is a Super League that cannot happen as long as the Premier League clubs won’t have anything to do with it.

And they are now banned from doing so if they want to stay in the Premier League.

Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United, Manchester City, Liverpool and Tottenham sneakily joined the Super League without consulting their fans in 2021.

The toxicity of the reaction that forced a U-turn means they wouldn’t dare risk a repeat.

But the Court of Justice ruling will allow many clubs to deploy the threat again that they dangled in Champions League cash talks with UEFA for years – the threat to go it alone.

For sure, UEFA’s dominance suits many clubs.

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New Trump audio reveals ex-president pressured Michigan officials to overturn 2020 election – report claims

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Donald Trump urged election officials in Michigan to “fight for our country” and not certify Joe Biden’s presidential election victory in 2020, according to local media.

The Detroit News reports a phone call made by the former president to two fellow Republicans on the Wayne County Board of Canvassers, in which he claims his party was “cheated”.

He reportedly added “everybody knows Detroit is crooked as hell” to the officials overseeing the county, which is Michigan’s most populous and includes Detroit, a Democratic city.

Mr Trump – who is the favourite to secure the Republican nomination for the 2024 election – currently faces criminal charges over allegations he conspired to overturn the 2020 results.

He argues he shouldn’t be prosecuted on the grounds former presidents cannot face criminal charges for conduct related to official responsibilities.

On Friday, the US Supreme Court declined to rule on his claims – leaving the matter for a lower court – as prosecutors try to fast-track a ruling and prevent Mr Trump from potentially delaying until he is back in office, when he could seek to pardon himself.

Asked about the latest audio, Mr Trump’s campaign spokesman, Steven Cheung, said his actions were taken “in furtherance of his duty as president of the United States to faithfully take care of the laws”.

He described the 2020 election as “rigged and stolen”.

The Detroit News’s report is reminiscent of Mr Trump’s tactics in Georgia, where he is charged with calling the Republican secretary of state to “find” enough votes to reverse his defeat there.

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Michigan authorities have filed charges against 16 Republican state residents for their role in an alleged false electors scheme following the 2020 presidential election, but they haven’t charged Mr Trump.

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson – who was not aware of the recordings until the report was published – said her office will continue to support investigations for “every crime committed in the attempt to overturn the will of Michigan voters”.

“We must recognise the direct line between these recordings and the tragedy that occurred at our US Capitol on 6 January 2021,” she added, referring to Mr Trump’s supporters’ attack as lawmakers met to certify Mr Biden’s win.

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Mr Trump’s trial over claims he tried to overturn the 2020 election is due to begin in March, but prosecutors are trying to nullify his claims of immunity in the meantime.

US District Judge Tanya Chutkan rejected the claims on 1 December, which prompted Mr Trump’s appeal to the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Read more:Trump ineligible for US presidency, Colorado court rulesCan Donald Trump run again in 2024?

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His appeal suspended his trial.

In a bid to avoid delaying the trial, US Special Counsel Jack Smith on 11 December urged the Supreme Court to make an expedited ruling – even as the DC Circuit court races to rule on the issue.

If Mr Trump is re-elected to the White House on 5 November next year, he could seek to pardon himself of any federal crimes.

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