
I had a gastric sleeve operation and have been taking Mounjaro for ten months but still can't cut out my favourite treats. This is my radical plan for finally tackling the nation's obesity problem: JENNI MURRAY
But in November, I had to buy petrol and the nearest pumps were attached to an M&S. Oh the horror when I realised I would have to go into the shop to pay for my petrol, to walk past the shelves of cakes and pizzas I'd forbidden myself.
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Sky News
18 minutes ago
- Sky News
Apprentice star Brady backs Reeves after Commons tears
Conservative peer Baroness Karren Brady has told Sky News she feels 'nothing but sympathy' for the chancellor, after Rachel Reeves was seen crying in the House of Commons during Prime Minister's Questions. Ms Reeves was seen visibly crying in the chamber the morning after her government was forced into another U-turn on welfare reform by Labour backbenchers, all but wiping out any savings in spending she was hoping to achieve. The Prime Minister failed to back his chancellor until after PMQs, leading markets to question her future. The Apprentice star warned: "She will be labelled 'weak' because it's a woman crying, the first woman chancellor, and I think that's a very dangerous thing." The aide to Lord Sugar, who was elevated to the upper chamber in 2014 by David Cameron, agreed with Kemi Badenoch's statement that "the leader of the opposition called her 'a shield', which the Prime Minister is hiding behind and there's probably a bit of truth in that as well." 1:16 Baroness Brady, who has previously been critical of negative economic sentiment from the Labour government and tax hikes on business, said Ms Reeves is "a strong, diligent person doing her job to the best of her ability under incredibly difficult circumstances". Earlier this year she told a newspaper that Reeves' hikes in business taxes "lacks an understanding of how businesses operate" and that last year's rise in employers' national insurance was a "mis-step". 11:07 However, speaking at an event in the City of London, Baroness Brady expressed sympathy with the chancellor saying: "Many people cry at work, most of them can go and hide in the toilet and not be seen. "Being emotional is largely in part because you care very much about what you're doing and how you're doing it." However, she did maintain her differences of opinion on the administration's approach to the economy, but stated: "She's made some pledges, that through no fault of her own, she may not be able to deliver because the floor has changed from underneath her." Aged 23, Baroness Brady was appointed as managing director of Birmingham City FC in 1993, and in 1997 became the youngest managing director of a UK plc, when the club floated on the London Stock Exchange.


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Broker hails City's resilience despite wave of takeovers and defection
Peel Hunt hailed fresh signs of life in the City as market conditions 'improve' and investor confidence proves 'increasingly resilient' in the face of global uncertainty. As anxiety over the health of the London stock market spreads through the Square Mile and Westminster, the investment bank said it has enjoyed 'a strong start' to its new financial year. And it said revenues for the three months to the end of June were 'comfortably ahead' of the same period last year – sending its own shares up 5.4 per cent by late morning. And it said revenues for the three months to the end of June were 'comfortably ahead' of the same period last year – sending its own shares up 5.4 per cent by late morning. The upbeat tone is particularly notable because Peel Hunt has been vocal in raising concerns over an exodus of companies from the stock exchange. In a report on Wednesday, it said the UK was on course for 'the biggest year of takeovers since 2021' after a flurry of merger and acquisition (M&A) activity in the first six months. Many of the bids have come from private equity and the United States as bargain-hunting predators swoop on undervalued firms on the London Stock Exchange (LSE). At the same time, London has been rocked by a wave of defections to other bourses with reports this week suggesting AstraZeneca – the UK's largest listed company with a value of £162billion – could move its listing to New York. A lack of new listings through so-called initial public offerings (IPOs) means these companies are not being replaced – sparking fears of terminal decline. But in an update at the company's annual general meeting yesterday, Peel Hunt bosses, led by chief executive Steven Fine, were on bullish form. 'We have had a strong start to our new financial year as market conditions have begun to improve,' they said in a statement. 'Whilst the macroeconomic background is hard to predict, investor confidence appears to be increasingly resilient.' The firm highlighted 'higher revenue generation' across key arms of the business and – perhaps unsurprisingly given the wave of takeover activity – 'a significant contribution from M&A transactions' as it advised companies on deals. It added: 'We continue to have a strong pipeline of M&A transactions, with a number of situations both announced and in process.' However, bosses expressed fresh concern about the lack of new listings, a key revenue stream for investment banks such as Peel Hunt that earn fees working with firms to bring them onto the stock market. 'It remains to be seen whether a more general pick up in equity issuance and IPO activity will follow,' they said. Set up in 1989, Peel Hunt listed on the LSE's Alternative Investment Market (AIM) in 2021. It now acts for 55 FTSE 350 companies, including 50 in the FTSE 250 and five in the FTSE 100.


BBC News
36 minutes ago
- BBC News
Reeves makes surprise appearance with PM after tears in Parliament
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has made a surprise appearance alongside Sir Keir Starmer, one day after she was seen crying at Prime Minister's to unveil the government's 10-year plan for the NHS, she was smiling and embraced the prime minister as they jointly set out the government's 10-year plan for the NHS. The pound plummeted and government borrowing costs rose after the incident in Parliament on Wednesday, when Sir Keir initially failed to guarantee that Reeves would keep her fall was partially reversed after Sir Keir insisted he was "in lockstep" with his chancellor, who he said would be in her job "for a very long time to come". In a bid to put on a united front, the chancellor joined Sir Keir and Health Secretary Wes Streeting at a hospital in East London to launch plans for new neighbourhood health Keir praised his chancellor, telling the audience that decisions made by Reeves had allowed the government to "invest record amounts in the NHS".Asked if he had been aware that his chancellor had been crying next to him in the House of Commons, Sir Keir said he "hadn't appreciated what was happening" as he was "literally up and down" answering questions.