
Jersey hatchback car with two-digit number plate sells for £230k
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
26 minutes ago
- The Independent
Kate Middleton's ‘cheeky' nephew tries to push mum in water in endearing clip
James Middleton has shared never-seen-before footage of his 'cheeky' son Indigo wandering around the countryside, with one clip showing the nearly two-year-old trying to push his mother into a creek. In footage shared by the 37-year-old on Instagram on Friday (1 August), the Princess of Wales ' nephew can be seen chucking sticks into a river and climbing up a hill with his dog. Reflecting on his son's upcoming birthday in October, James said: 'My adventurous and cheeky little boy. How are you nearly two already? Everyone says it goes fast…but I didn't realise it would be this fast.'


The Independent
26 minutes ago
- The Independent
Reeves: Of course you are going to disappoint people as Chancellor
Rachel Reeves admits Labour has 'disappointed' people while in government. The politician said she understood that being Chancellor meant making unpopular decisions. She told an audience at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival that Labour had got the balance right between tax, spending and borrowing. But she said that balancing the books meant making tough decisions, even if the are unpopular. Appearing on the Iain Dale All Talk fringe show, she said: 'The reason people voted Labour at the last election is they want to change and they were unhappy with the way that the country was being governed. 'They know that we inherited a mess. They know it's not easy to put it right, but people are impatient for change. 'I'm impatient for change as well, but I've also got the job of making sure the sums always add up – and it doesn't always make you popular because you can't do anything you might want to do. You certainly can't do everything straight away, all at once.' Ms Reeves pointed to Labour's £200 million investment in carbon capture in the north east of Scotland, which she said was welcomed by the industry. At the same time, Labour's windfall tax, she said, was not liked by the sector. 'I can understand that that's extra tax that the oil and gas sector are paying, but you can't really have one without the other,' she said. Defending Labour's record, she said her party had the 'balance about right'. 'But of course you're going to disappoint people,' she added. 'No-one wants to pay more taxes. 'Everyone wants more money than public spending – and borrowing is not a free option, because you've got to pay for it. 'I think people know those sort of constraints, but no-one really likes them and I'm the one, I guess, that has to sort the sums up.' Ms Reeves said Labour had to deliver on its general election campaign of change, adding that her party did not 'deserve' to win the next election if it does not deliver the change it promised.


Telegraph
27 minutes ago
- Telegraph
National Lottery goes offline in high-stakes upgrade
A team of IT experts will be on red alert this weekend as the National Lottery is plunged into a two-day blackout as part of the biggest technology overhaul in its 31-year history. The Gambling Commission, whose job it is to ensure one of Britain's biggest sources of charity donations is properly run, has assembled a team of people to supervise a complex upgrade scheduled to last 36 hours. A spokesman for the commission said. 'We will have colleagues working over the full period to closely examine updates from Allwyn as this important change is implemented.' Meanwhile, the number of agents taking calls on the National Lottery hotline will treble on Sunday and be four times the usual number on Monday in case of any major glitches. The number of engineers on duty will double. The state of readiness follows months of scrutiny over Allwyn's faltering stewardship of one of Britain's largest public sector contracts. The company, owned by Czech billionaire Karel Komárek, has encountered repeated problems as it attempts to fulfil a pledge to modernise the technology that underpins the lottery. A succession of setbacks has led to a fall in sales and profits, reducing the amount of money handed over for charitable causes. In March, The Telegraph revealed that the lottery was facing a £2bn shortfall in donations in its maiden year under Allwyn. When Allwyn took over the fourth licence it made an ambitious promise to more than double donations from £17.9bn under predecessor Camelot to £38bn. Players have been told that they will be unable to check tickets or numbers in shops across Britain from Saturday evening until Monday morning while the lottery's systems are offline. Online accounts, the National Lottery website and its phone app will also be down. The update is set to take place immediately following Saturday's Lotto and Thunderball draws. Allwyn's UK chief has hailed the changeover, in which the lottery's gaming and retail systems will be transferred to new platforms, as a world-first. 'There isn't anywhere in the world that this scale of project has ever been done. No other retailer has 43,500 stores,' Andria Vidler said recently. 'This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to deliver the National Lottery that the UK deserves. We're making unprecedented and much-needed changes, which will move us closer to achieving our vision for The National Lottery,' she added this weekend. The upgrades include the delivery of more than 30 new systems and the transfer of tens of thousands of retailer records and millions of transactions. In the build-up, 10 weeks of technical rehearsals have been carried out.