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Reeves follows Thatcher and Sturgeon with public tears

Reeves follows Thatcher and Sturgeon with public tears

Telegraph3 days ago
Rachel Reeves cried in dramatic scenes during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday.
Her emotion came as Sir Keir Starmer failed to guarantee that she would remain in her role as Chancellor.
However, she is not the first British politician to cry in public.
Margaret Thatcher, 1990
Baroness Thatcher was known as the Iron Lady partly because she never appeared flustered or emotional in public.
However, she was moved to tears when she left Downing Street for the last time in 1990 after 11 years as prime minister.
George Osborne, 2013
The former chancellor became emotional during Thatcher's funeral in 2013.
Mr Osborne was brought to tears during the sermon delivered by Lord Chartres, the then bishop of London.
He was chancellor until 2016 when he quit in the wake of the Brexit referendum.
Theresa May, 2019
Baroness May was in tears as she announced her resignation as prime minister in May 2019.
She said she had tried her best to deliver Brexit and it was a 'deep regret' that she was not able to.
Matt Hancock, 2020
Health Secretary Matt Hancock becomes emotional hearing the words of the first man in the world to receive the vaccine, William Shakespeare.
He tearily says 'it makes you so proud to be British'. @piersmorgan | @susannareid100
Watch the full interview👉 https://t.co/fzcHkA6S4k pic.twitter.com/IxzfZ3GAVs
— Good Morning Britain (@GMB) December 8, 2020
Matt Hancock, the former health secretary, fought back tears in December 2020 as he watched one of the first British people receive the coronavirus vaccine live on Good Morning Britain.
'It's been such a tough year for so many people and there's William Shakespeare putting it so simply,' Mr Hancock said after gathering himself.
Mr Hancock resigned just six months later after his affair with Gina Colandangelo, an aide, was revealed.
Nicola Sturgeon, 2024
Nicola Sturgeon was accused of crocodile tears by bereaved families when she broke down at the Covid Inquiry.
The former first minister admitted to deleting her WhatsApp messages during the pandemic despite promising Scots they would all be made public.
She had already quit the position in February 2023 after admitting she had become a 'polarising figure'.
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Marcus Rashford sends message to Ruben Amorim after being exiled from pre-season training and stripped of his No 10 shirt
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Marcus Rashford sends message to Ruben Amorim after being exiled from pre-season training and stripped of his No 10 shirt

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How a £1.5bn ‘wildlife-boosting' bypass became an environmental disaster
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The Guardian

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How a £1.5bn ‘wildlife-boosting' bypass became an environmental disaster

Lorries thunder over the A14 bridge north of Cambridge, above steep roadside embankments covered in plastic shrouds containing the desiccated remains of trees. Occasionally the barren landscape is punctuated by a flash of green where a young hawthorn or a fledgling honeysuckle has emerged apparently against the odds, but their shock of life is an exception in the treeless landscape. The new 21-mile road between Cambridge and Huntingdon cost £1.5bn and was opened in 2020 to fulfil a familiar political desire: growth. One of Britain's biggest infrastructure projects of the past decade, it was approved by the secretary of state for transport over the heads of locally elected councillors. National Highways, the government-owned company that builds and maintains Britain's A roads, promised that the biodiversity net gain from the construction project would be 11.5%; in other words, they pledged the natural environment would be left in a considerably better state after the road was built than before. But five years on from the opening of the A14, the evidence is otherwise, and National Highways has admitted biodiversity and the environment have been left in a worse state as a result of the road project. Empty plastic tree guards stretch for mile after mile along the new road, testament to the mass die-off of most of the 860,000 trees planted in mitigation for the impact of the road. Culverts dug as a safe route for animals such as newts and water voles are dried up and litter-strewn, while ponds designed to collect rainwater and provide a wildlife habitat are choked with mud and silt. 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From 2026, biodiversity net gain will be mandatory for big infrastructure such as the A14 road. But Becky Pullinger, head of land management for the Wildlife Trusts, said developers had to be held to account once the mandate came in, so that recreated habitats had a fighting chance of survival. A recent report showed that only a third of ecological enhancements promised by housebuilders were fulfilled. Pullinger said the example of the A14 showed how important it was that harm to wildlife was avoided in the first place, reducing the need for compensation planting. 'The failures highlight the challenges of trying to recreate mature habitats: it takes years, if not decades, for saplings to turn into woodland and provide much needed spaces for the wildlife [affected] by development,' she said. A National Highways spokesperson said: 'We take our responsibility to the environment very seriously. The A14 upgrade project was not limited to just improving the road; our ongoing environmental work remains a long-term project that we will continue to monitor and support. Between October 2023 and April 2024 – the optimum planting season – 165,000 trees and shrubs were planted. These comprised 16 different species specially selected to enhance the surrounding areas and habitats. Our latest survey showed that nearly 90% of these trees have survived. Nationally, we continue to monitor, evaluate and adapt our practices to respond to a rapidly changing climate to meet the challenges that it brings.'

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