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Mat Barzal tells The Post how his Islanders motivations have shifted

At this time in past years, Mat Barzal has often taken a wide focus. He’s talked during prior training camps about wanting to be part of the league’s upper echelon of stars, and both last year and in the run-up to the NHL’s pullout from the 2022 Olympics, he made no secret of how much...

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UK rape charges against Andrew Tate are DROPPED as influencer claims he’s ‘most mistreated man in history’

ANDREW Tate's rape charges in the UK have been dropped, with the controversial influencer moaning about his "mistreatment". Three women in their late twenties and early thirties had accused Tate of crimes including rape and sexual and physical assaults - including holding guns to their heads and strangulations with belts. But the CPS said today...

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Creeslough tragedy investigation file sent to DPP amid fresh garda appeal for ‘any information’ after fatal blast

AN investigation file into the Creeslough tragedy has been forwarded to the Director of Public Prosecutions, gardai have said. It comes almost three years after 10 people were killed in an explosion at a building complex in the Co Donegal village on October 7, 2022. Gardai said the families of the 10 who died and...

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BBC set to make 99-year-old Sir David Attenborough their latest Tiktok star 

THE BBC want to make 99-year-old Sir David Attenborough their latest star on Tiktok. 

Our much-loved naturalist and natural treasure is the perfect frontman for the two minute videos on the social media site, according to the corporation’s director general Tim Davie

David Attenborough in a blue jacket by the coast in southern England.
PA
The BBC want to make 99-year-old Sir David Attenborough their latest star on Tiktok[/caption]

He says Sir David – who turns 100 next may – is now an icon to young people who adore his shows, including The Blue Planet and Planet Earth

Segments of the programmes could be crunched down into bite-sized chunks to be consumed by millions of Gen Z viewers. 

Mr Davie said: “I think what doesn’t work is a massive lurch to youth and trying very hard to be the coolest one on the block, 

“Who is incredibly popular with young people? Our 99-year-old natural history presenter, who is a legend who they trust. 

“The key thing is to be trusted, and to be absolutely speaking with authenticity.” 

Talking to the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee, Mr Davie said that Sir David was the ultimate example of a presenter: “who can talk directly to young people and who they engage with. 

“They are also interested in different formats.

“I do not believe in trapping the public service broadcasting format.” 

“I do believe you can do a two-minute thing on TikTok, but actually make sure it meets the BBC’s editorial values.

“That is not dumbing down if you do it right; it just may not be to everyone’s taste.” 

Sir David has always moved with the times.

He pioneered colour TV when he was BBC Two controller and last year – aged 98 -launched a virtual reality experience in London allowing users to immerse themselves in a world of jaw dropping insects and plants

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Starmer vows to get tough on migrants AND welfare & warns Labour lefties they won’t like it as he battles critics

SIR Keir Starmer will today tell squeamish Labour lefties to get on board with uncomfortable but necessary decisions on migration, spending and welfare cuts.

The PM will say there is “nothing compassionate or progressive” about letting illegal migrants cross the Channel as he stakes his political life on bringing an end to the small boats crisis.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and his wife Lady Victoria rehearsing his Labour Party conference keynote speech.
PA
The PM will tell squeamish Labour lefties to get on board with necessary decisions on migration, spending and welfare cuts[/caption]
People queue outside a Job Centre.
Getty Images - Getty
Starmer must also wrestle Labour’s left on Britain’s bloated benefits bill[/caption]
Migrants in an inflatable dinghy leaving a beach in northern France to cross the English Channel.
Reuters
Sir Keir sees stopping the migrant boats as crucial to reelection[/caption]

He is under pressure to give a storming conference speech to silence his growing number of critics in both the party and across the country.

Delivering hard truths to his party faithful, the Labour leader will say beating Reform will require “decisions that are not cost-free or easy — decisions that will not always be comfortable for our party”.

Sir Keir sees stopping the migrant boats, maintaining economic discipline and taking another stab at slashing Britain’s bloated benefits bill as vital to winning re-election.

And he will once again paint Reform leader Nigel Farage as a divisive figure.

Secure borders are also vital for a decent, compassionate country

Starmer

The PM will say: “Britain stands at a fork in the road. We can choose decency — or we can choose division.”

A string of Cabinet ministers yesterday backed the PM’s claim that Mr Farage’s migration policy was “racist”.

Yet the PM will try to talk tough on boats and borders today, after immigration became the top concern of voters whom he is losing to Reform.

Sir Keir will tell the party faithful in Liverpool: “Secure borders are also vital for a decent, compassionate country.

“Controlling who comes here is an essential task of government and there’s nothing compassionate or progressive in a vile trade that loads people on to overcrowded boats, puts them in grave danger in the Channel and ultimately exploits human desperation.

“Mark my words, we will stop this. We will smash the gangs. We will crack down on illegal working.

“We will remove people with no right to be here. We will secure Britain’s borders.”

Channel crossings are at record levels under Labour, while use of asylum hotels has also increased.

It has seen Reform open up a ten-point lead, according to some polls, and become the bookies’ favourite to form the next government.

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood set the tone yesterday with her own tough-talking — and said Mr Farage’s plan was “worse than racist… it’s immoral”.

She unveiled reforms to “indefinite leave to remain” rules, doubling waits from five years to ten and announcing new conditions.

Migrants will have to prove they are in work, paying National Insurance, learning English to a high standard and staying out of trouble.

But she is looking closely at what to do about the Boriswave, because she is concerned about what happens when that group passes beyond the five-year mark and automatically receives ILR

Home Office source on Mahmood

Claiming benefits will count against them, while volunteering in the community or employing others could help them qualify sooner.

Officials say the new system will allow migrants to “earn down” the ten-year wait through positive contributions — or “earn up” if they fail to pull their weight.

But the crackdown does not apply retrospectively, meaning the so-called Boriswave of approximately 1.3million who arrived when post-Brexit visa rules changed between 2021 and 2024 can still qualify after just five years.

Britain's Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood addresses delegates on the second day of the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool.
AFP
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood set the tone yesterday with her own tough-talking[/caption]

It is understood Ms Mahmood is weighing a separate emergency fix just for them, although it may not be the same model.

One source close to the Home Secretary said: “For anybody who is in the country now, the new conditions don’t apply.

“But she is looking closely at what to do about the Boriswave, because she is concerned about what happens when that group passes beyond the five-year mark and automatically receives ILR.”

In solving this crisis, you may not always like what I do

Shabana Mahmood

But lawyers have warned any retrospective move would spark legal challenges.

Ashley Stothard, immigration lawyer at Freeths, said of applying the ten-year rule retrospectively: “I think that change would be challenged by judicial review on the basis that it’s unfair.

“We saw a similar situation back in 2008 when the government attempted to retrospectively change the criteria for the Highly Skilled Migrant Programme.

“That challenge was successful, and the new criteria were not applied to those already in the UK.

“The case upheld the principle that immigration policy should be fair and transparent. Migrants in the UK have a legitimate expectation they can qualify for indefinite leave to remain under the rules in place when they entered.”

Ms Mahmood yesterday warned Labour members they might not approve of her migrant crackdown.

She said: “In solving this crisis, you may not always like what I do.

“We will have to question some of the assumptions and legal constraints that have lasted for a generation and more.

“But unless we have control of our borders and until we can decide who comes in and who must leave, we will never be the open, tolerant and generous country that I know we all believe in.”

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer applauding.
Getty
Sir Keir will tell the party faithful in Liverpool: ‘Secure borders are also vital for a decent, compassionate country’[/caption]

Calling for “a greater Britain, not a littler England”, Ms Mahmood said Labour must make the case for its own form of patriotism to stem what she claimed was a rising tide of “ethno-nationalism”.

She concluded, saying: “Some may describe me in the coming months as a ‘tough’ Home Secretary. Perhaps that is true.

“But let it never be forgotten that I will be a tough Labour Home Secretary, fighting alongside you all for a vision of this country that is distinctly our own.”

Reform deputy leader Richard Tice said: “Her speech-writers may have toughened her rhetoric but the Home Secretary’s speech won’t wash with the public.”

On Sir Keir’s speech, Tory chairman Kevin Hollinrake said: “Keir Starmer calls this a fork in the road, but he’s already driven Britain into a cul-de-sac of chaos.

“Families are fighting to cope with higher bills, higher taxes on jobs and higher mortgage rates.”

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Boy, 16, shot on NYC street shortly after older teen fatally gunned down by moped-riding crew: cops, sources

The boy – who sources say has no prior arrests – was blasted in the right thigh just before 9 p.m. at the corner Bergen and Brook avenues in Melrose, a mixed residential and commercial block with apartments across the street from an Aldi and a Walgreens, police said. 

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