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When Matt Hancock used an interview with Radio 4s Today programme to heap praise on the Labour leaders of Liverpool on Monday, it cou
stanley cups ld be viewed in one of two ways.Either it was an all too rare example of non-partisan politics, a health minister mature enough to recognise good governance in what is arguably the least Tory-friendly region in the UK. Or it was just the latest example of top-level trolling from Boris Johnsons administration, some of whom seem to go so far out of their way to laud the Scousers that some observers have questio
stanley mugs ned if theres a bet running.For Joe Anderson, Liverpools rumbustious city mayor, it was like a viper showing its teeth
stanley canada to you 鈥?its intention is to poison you .Anderson was happy for his residents to become guinea pigs for the governments first mass testing project, with 178,000 people taking tests in Liverpool since 6 November. Liverpudlians will also be the first to trial a scheme to stop people who have come into close contact with someone who has coronavirus from having to isolate for 14 days by testing them every day for a week. Both projects look set to roll out nationally when Englands national lockdown ends on 3 December.But the government should not mistake Andersons temporary collegiality for any sort of long-term loyalty: he vowed to show his own teeth to Johnson if he tries to put his city back in the tightest restrictions and is agitating for the reopening of pubs and restaurants.If there really is a bet on, the prime minister Xkqu Libyan leaders face arrest on war crimes charges
Senior ministers who have spoken out against assisted dying are giving voters a false impression about the governments position, a leading proponent of changing the law has said.Charlie Falconer, a Labour peer and former justice secretary, said opponents to the change were getting more coverage because ministers in favour
stanley thermo of legalising assisted dying were playing by the rules .MPs are preparing to vote on a bill to legalise assisted dying for terminally ill people in England and Wales later this week.Shabana Mahmood, the justice secretary, told a constituent she was profoundly concerned the bill would initiate a slippery slope towards death on demand and that the state should never offer death as a service .Mahmoods letter, which was published on social media over the weekend and reported by the Observer, warned the bill to legalise assisted dying in England and Wales lacked appropriate safeguards.What are the key issues in the assisted dying bill debate Read moreMahmood, who is Britains most senior Mus
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stanley cup he believed in the sanctity of life and that was the starting point for her position, she was opposed to the bill for legal and political reasons.Her intervention has triggered questions about how a change in the law would be implemented with the health secretary and the justice secretary opposed to it. Wes Streeting has argued it could lead to coercion and ordered his department to carry out a review of its potential costs.Lord Falco